I havent used this drill yet, nor has anyone else for that matter! Its funny holding a 30 year old new tool in your hand.
Well, they are not speakers, they are something like a speaker, a transducer. The bubbles I don't think are hydrogen, the sound induces a cavitation in the water/solvent, which produce tiny bubbles, which collapse with extreme force, this action is what pulls/tears the dirt off the part to be cleaned.
Yes Jay Leno has a huge one, worth thousands.
Anybody know if you can purchase a transducer alone to make a US cleaner?
That jack looks like it has had little use.Good score,those always come in handy
Lawrence
Hey guys, I know I haven't been around much since Christmas... (right Lawrence? haha...) And truth be told haven't worked on or with a saw at all since rebuilding my friend's 394 over Christmas break.
Anyway, back last summer I brought home an old impact gun along with a few junker saws from the scrapyard one day. I never really looked at the gun at the time, just thought it was some cheapo, but I've rebuilt probably half a dozen quite easily in the last couple years, mostly at work, that people had given up on simply because they hadn't been oiled properly and had stuck. Well imagine my surprise when I took the rubber protective boot off the gun and found a nice, but well used, Snap-On IM-51A!:
They're not really terribly complicated machines. They can be tricky to get back together in the right order sometimes but it's not too bad. This one was just full of sticky grease and junk, you could turn the shaft over by hand quite easily but the air just wouldn't break it loose. I totally tore it down and washed/degreased it all in Varsol, then reassembled (took me two tries) with a good dose of air tool oil on everything. She purrs like a kitten now!:
<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="640" height="390" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/TK1liJWm-MY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Excuse the tunes LOL. Forgot I had that going in the background when I made the vid. It's funny how music can fade out so you don't notice it after a while. Anyway she ain't real pretty on the outside, but the guts looked to be in excellent condition. I couldn't find any noticeable wear anywhere, to be honest. I haven't put it to work on a stuck bolt yet to see what it can do, but I'm sure it'll do fine, it has plenty of snap to it when you pull the trigger and feels a lot more torquey than the cheapie I've been using. It seems the newer equivalent of these guns go for well over $300 USD, so I guess I did OK at free!
Found this little critter in a estate tool box I picked up.
No instructions.
Thanks.
I will take it to the cabin in try it out on the wood stove there.Let us know if it works good!
JoeSalter.com - Details for The Marlin M. 1881 Reloading Tool 38-55 Cal.
Came across this gun tool at a yard sale $2
The link above is the only info I could find.
any info out there??
Bob
A bit late i realize, but here's the place to figure it out.
Antique Reloading Tool Collector's Association
That appears to be an early hand reloader with the bullet mould included.
The number of guys here who've never seen or used a tire hammer make me feel positively oooooold.
Different estate.Heh Bob did you pick that stuff up from the same place you got the last bunch of Stihl parts, or is that a separate seller?
Lawrence
Enter your email address to join: