rj's and burbans are indeed nicknamed nut roasters....
early RJ's were belt drive, later ones and suburbans were unidrive 3 speed transaxles. Fairly easy to spot the early ones due to the belt cover and simple front axle, the suburbans were cast axle.
Anyone feel free to correct me - I may well have made all this up
That's not good Richard, I have bought a lot like you, but never tried the programme...
sound like i continue to take the import hit, or just pay upfront!
The weather was reasonable on Saturday so we made start on collecting leaves.
I blew them into piles and the kids collected and tipped.
Had a play up the field moving boulders and collecting some gravel...
that wet clay clay stuff is heavy...
the trailer sinks with 1/2 ton and needs two tractors to move it.
and eventually even C4 bogs down and loses the will to live. I need a trailer with flotation tyres on. That or I need to stop overloading the trailer
It's where the spring touches the crack was horizontal! I can only assume it's a combination of age, cold and the tension of the spring...
I may use a rubber band to hold it down when the glue dries...
A bodger would file the corner off the bed as the carriage can't travel that far!
an engineer would frown, and as I'm an engineer and it's a 60 year old lathe I will have to find a solution that doesn't include buying a bigger lathe!
Ive four of them to turn down so it needs to be effective