36 sleeps to go, peeps.
BOING!
Schools here closed yesterday and will remain so until Monday.
Mike, honestly, you don't want any of this minging White stuff. Wednesday's drive home was particularly scary. We had an early finish yesterday, so managed to get home whilst it was still light, but not nice with the compacted snow, ice-on-ice and snow drifts with that bitter wind. Loads of cars in ditches, hardly a surprise when you see some of the dodgy driving displayed my some. Poor old Brem is struggling to stay on her feet in the ice, with her legs being weak and unable to generate grip.
Loads of people stranded on the roads in various places in the country. Not nice.
THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
NEXT EVENT :- August 3/4, 2024.........BOING!!
36 sleeps to go, peeps.
BOING!
THE BOINGER BASH AT QUIGLEY HOLLOW. MAKING GREAT MEMORIES SINCE 15th JUNE, 2013.
NEXT EVENT :- August 3/4, 2024.........BOING!!
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Done my bit for the BBS: http://www.airgunbbs.com/showthread....-being-a-mod-… now I’m a game-keeper turned poacher.
Good point Gareth
34 sleeps before I get back to the Hollow
Pete
Very well Tone, I managed to get a pew with a radiator under it.
The article will be about repowering classic tractors with an engine swap as a way of keeping them working.
The V8 T20 conversion I recently did is just the last in a long line of engine conversions (normally diesel) that I've carried out in the last 30 years.
My main input was to supply pictures and describe how I make the adaptor plates for the bell housing and clutch to ensure you're engine is aligned, and how to mount your front axle --- fairly boring stuff really and I didn't even ask what magazine it was going into.
V8 Adaptor :-
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I just take it one day at a time, Tone --- yesterday very bad, today a bit better.
We’ve had flurry’s over the last few days, about 2” in my garden and the local park but all the local roads and pavements are pretty clear now. I was supposed to be going over to see my mate in The Forest of Dean but they are very close to a Red snow warning so I am very reluctantly staying put today.
HW77K .22, HW100KT .22, HW95K .22. AA TX200 MK3 .22. AA S410 MK3 .177. HW80 .25 HW30S .22. Pistols: Walther CP88 .177, Hatsan Mod25 Supercharger .22, HW45 Silver Star .177, Webley Alecto .177, SMK Victory CP2 .22
Paul,
I'm relatively close to the forest (20 miles) and honestly mate I'd have advised against it. I've got about 8" of snow in the garden and local main roads by me are pretty impassable. My lad had a 35 mile commute last night and almost piled the car when he lost the back end on a roundabout. Local hills are blocked with stuck HGV's.
Last edited by CapitalBee; 02-03-2018 at 09:33 AM. Reason: tense changed
LOADS of snow for us
LOOKING FOR A BSA ULTRA IN .177 and .25
That sounds fascinating, Mick. When I was working at Writtle Agricultural College in the mid 1980s, we totally renovated a pale grey (is there any other acceptable colour?) 1950s T 20 and a royal blue with orange wheels (again, is there any other acceptable livery?) 1960s Fordson Major with our Agricultural Mechanical Engineering Apprentices (AgMecApps). Lots of fun. Have some photos somewhere but God knows where (lol). Atb: G.
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Done my bit for the BBS: http://www.airgunbbs.com/showthread....-being-a-mod-… now I’m a game-keeper turned poacher.
I am currently "working" from home, looking out of the window and feeling very pleased that I booked the premier inn
Pete
I am currently "retired from home" and I'm extremely glad that I am !
“An airgun or two”………
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Done my bit for the BBS: http://www.airgunbbs.com/showthread....-being-a-mod-… now I’m a game-keeper turned poacher.
Other folks seem to find it fascinating, Gareth, it's just work to me.
The late 1980's saw me taking an OND in agricultural engineering at the long gone Ryecotewood College, Thame, Oxfordshire --- it's a housing estate now.
Now, trying not to look too sad, Fergies came mainly in grey, but some came out in other colours, Yellow for highways, Green for parks, Blue for RAF tug tractors, in France, many were sold with Grey tin work and red castings and the Kent produced narrow vineyard tractors were grey with a blue flash around the bonnet.
When the Fergy FE35 was introduced it had grey tin work with gold castings, when Ferguson were taken over by Massey Harris the MHF FE35 colour was changed to the familiar red tin work with grey castings which was carried on by Massey Ferguson.
Fordson Majors started off as blue with orange wheels but changed to blue with white wheels before production ended, this colour scheme was carried over when Ford introduced the Ford Force tractors in the late 1960's.
Reading that back there really is no way to make it look anything but sad.
Anyway here's one of my older conversions :-
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T20 with 2 litre Austin Maestro turbo Diesel engine.
Nice to see you gave the workshop a thorough tidy up before takin the pictures mick.
Dave
Smell my cheese