alkun Albert Kun Elite Moderator Location: SF Ca. Join Date: 01/07/2008 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 1,732 Rally Car: volvo 242 |
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slidewayswrx Patrick Darrow Godlike Moderator Location: Portland OR Join Date: 12/30/2006 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 379 Rally Car: Swedish John Deere |
Bit of work done yesterday and I'm off for another round here in just a bit. First I'll share.
Sticking with the Dana30 for now but there are thoughts of other (wider) options in the future so we decided to try and get as much room out of the rear wheel wells as possible. For some reason, if you think of the curve of a normal well as concave, the outer part of these are convex. WTF? So out they came... You can see through the hole some reinforcement tacked and glued to the inside of the fender. This has also been pulled. While I was chopping away in the rear Blake worked on getting the axle welded up... Pan-hard mount still needs reinforcing and then its the shock tabs Happy to be moving forward once again. Blake was still zapping away when I left so depending on how far he got we might get to cut the holes for the towers tonight. Feels good. If you might be the type to find this type of shit extraneous, well then you can kiss my grits. I also cut out all the seat belt anchors in the back, just to piss you off. Zap zap my ass... Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/20/2012 08:03PM by slidewayswrx. |
john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Elite Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
Pat been dragging this week...I guess its normal but man its a drag. Haven't cleared up those other pieces.. I will but I guess I'm 'spossed to be taking it easy...just slept from 2PM -5.50PM and am cross-eyed..
Did crawl under yesterday and did a quick "fix" on wifey car muffler in about 1 minute.. It's horrible.....last week when just out of the OR she said what happened, I knew it would happen and i was saying "just shove it back it, wahhhh! grrrr1 cram IT IN, that's all it needs for now" and she didn't understand. John Vanlandingham Sleezattle, WA, USA Vive le Prole-le-ralliat www.rallyrace.net/jvab CALL +1 206 431-9696 Remember! Pacific Standard Time is 3 hours behind Eastern Standard Time. |
slidewayswrx Patrick Darrow Godlike Moderator Location: Portland OR Join Date: 12/30/2006 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 379 Rally Car: Swedish John Deere |
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john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Elite Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
OK I'll have a cup now....its rough sitting though, really...like Ouch it pushes on the gash.... Reading a great book though "We Meant Well....How I Helped Lose the Battle of Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People" by Peter Van Buren, a lifetime State Dept Officer. He's this war's Micheal Herr with a dash of Heller thrown in, John Vanlandingham Sleezattle, WA, USA Vive le Prole-le-ralliat www.rallyrace.net/jvab CALL +1 206 431-9696 Remember! Pacific Standard Time is 3 hours behind Eastern Standard Time. |
RallyTaco Chris Lanctot Infallible Moderator Location: Livonia, MI Join Date: 03/15/2008 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 107 Rally Car: just a wannabe |
Sorry if I am in full retard mode and don't see the forest for the trees but I'm not exactly getting what is going on here? Triangulated panhard rod? It seems 90 degrees weird for that. No comprendo mucho. I know I could just wait to find out but I'm going full on Asperger trying to figure this out. Can haz explain?
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Gravity Fed Alex Staidle Elite Moderator Location: Δx = ħ/2Δp Join Date: 08/21/2009 Age: Settling Down Posts: 1,719 Rally Car: Various Heaps |
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sidewaez Blake Lind Senior Moderator Location: Hillsboro Oregon Join Date: 06/09/2009 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 233 Rally Car: orange AE86 |
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wvonkessler Wilson von Kessler Infallible Moderator Location: Lookout Mountain, GA Join Date: 02/28/2006 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 1,127 Rally Car: Colts are in Finland; now '87 325i, '89 325i |
Man I loved Dispatches. "Talk about drugs. Driving a car like that, going that fast, it’s like all the drugs at once." - Tommy Byrne "Now, Pinky, if by any chance you are captured during this mission, remember you are Gunther Heindriksen from Appenzell. You moved to Grindelwald to drive the cog train to Murren. Can you repeat that?" - The Brain |
alkun Albert Kun Elite Moderator Location: SF Ca. Join Date: 01/07/2008 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 1,732 Rally Car: volvo 242 |
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john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Elite Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
Finished it and in the afterword the author says he was thinking of Dispatches the whole time and the chapters Inhaling and Exhaling are homages to Herr. I don't know how old you are Wilson, but that war was for me ALWAYS in the background from when I was 3 till, well in my book, now in one way or another... Herr did the voice over narrative to Apocalypse Now and I'd seen that movie when it came out, first time in Germany with a gang of young Germans, all of us Anti-war to the max, and at my suggestion we all drank whiskey "to see the world like officers do"; then in London after a little smokie hash.... A few weeks before, literally a couple of days after the paperback was available I'd bought and read it at a sitting...... I've known and worked with a LOT of combat veterans, known it well enough to really talk---to see the scars 'where it went in here'....and came out here', infantry or airborne.....REAL shooting then (not like now where every fat old redneck neocon "was a LURP" )(yeah right, lotta LURPS....no grunts) Anyway that book distilled the"sense" of what these guys said same time as it put into words those a couple of steps away who watched the madness for years. Look at this:
Suggested reading list for anybody who wants to read about America's groping toward Empire: The Quiet American, Graham Greene 1955/56 The Ugly American, Lederer and Burdick 1958 Dispatches, Micheal Herr. 1977 We Meant Well, Van Buren, 2011 John Vanlandingham Sleezattle, WA, USA Vive le Prole-le-ralliat www.rallyrace.net/jvab CALL +1 206 431-9696 Remember! Pacific Standard Time is 3 hours behind Eastern Standard Time. |
slidewayswrx Patrick Darrow Godlike Moderator Location: Portland OR Join Date: 12/30/2006 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 379 Rally Car: Swedish John Deere |
Ah, thanks John.
Now back on topic... Last night we worked on the car late into the night but it was a Friday so much bullshitting was had. We rolled the car on its roof and I duplicated the hacking of wheel wells and pulling the structure on the passenger side. While Blake went zappy zap zap in the background. The gussets on the front of the four link tabs got fully weld in and the pan-hard mount is now complete. Alex and Chris, here is some reference. Check out pics 546, 551, and 600-611 http://www.mat.fi/n_index.php?nav=gallery_view&gallery=projecttoyotacelicaturbotc35&g=13 Zap zap my ass... |
RallyTaco Chris Lanctot Infallible Moderator Location: Livonia, MI Join Date: 03/15/2008 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 107 Rally Car: just a wannabe |
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wvonkessler Wilson von Kessler Infallible Moderator Location: Lookout Mountain, GA Join Date: 02/28/2006 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 1,127 Rally Car: Colts are in Finland; now '87 325i, '89 325i |
Favorite passage from Dispatches: "One day in 1963 Henry Cabot Lodge was walking around the Saigon Zoo with some reporters, and a tiger pissed on him through the bars of its cage. Lodge made a joke, something like, 'He who wears the pee of the tiger is assured of success in the coming year.' Maybe nothing’s so unfunny as an omen read wrong. And this one (which was taken verbatim and put in Apocalypse Now): "We heard then what sounded at first like a little girl crying, a subdued, delicate wailing, and as we listened it became louder and more intense, taking on pain as it grew until it was a full, piercing shriek. The three of us turned to each other, we could almost feel each other shivering. It was terrible, absorbing every other sound coming from the darkness. Whoever it was, he was past caring about anything except the thing he was screaming about. There was a dull pop in the air above us, and an illumination round fell drowsily over the wire. "'Slope,' Mayhew said. 'See him there, see there, on the wire there?' "I couldn't see anything out there, there was no movement, and the screaming had stopped. As the flare dimmed, the sobbing started up and built quickly until it was a scream again. "A Marine brushed past us. He had a moustache and a piece of camouflaged parachute silk fastened bandana-style around his throat, and on his hip he wore a holster which held an M-79 grenade-launcher. For a second I thought I'd hallucinated him. I hadn't heard him approaching, and I tried now to see where he might have come from, but I couldn't. The M-79 had been cut down and fitted with a special stock. It was obviously a well-loved object; you could see the kind of work that had gone into it by the amount of light caught from the flares that glistened on the stock. The Marine looked serious, dead-eyed serious, and his right hand hung above the holster, waiting. The screaming had stopped again. "'Wait,' he said. 'I'll fix that fucker.' "His hand was resting now on the handle of the weapon. The sobbing began again, and the screaming; we had the pattern now, the North Vietnamese was screaming the same thing over and over, and we didn't need a translator to tell us what it was. "'Put that fucker away,' the Marine said, as though to himself. He drew the weapon, opened the breach and dropped in a round that looked like a great swollen bullet, listening very carefully all the while to the shrieking. He placed the M-79 over his left forearm and aimed for a second before firing. There was an enormous flash on the wire 200 metres away, a spray of orange sparks, and then everything was still except for the roll of some bombs exploding kilometres away and the sound of the M-79 being opened, closed again and returned to the holster. Nothing changed on the Marine's face, nothing, and he moved back into the darkness. "'Get some,' Mayhew said quietly. 'Man, did you see that?' "And I said, Yes (lying), it was something, really something. "The lieutenant said he hoped that I was getting some real good stories here. He told me to take her easy and disappeared. Mayhew looked out at the wire again, but the silence of the ground in front of us was really talking to him now. His fingers were limp, touching his face, and he looked like a kid at a scary movie. I poked his arm and we went back to the bunker for some more of that sleep." Add to your list: Bernard Fall: Hell in a Very Small Place Neil Sheehan: A Bright and Shining Lie The Pentagon Papers and if you have not had enough, and a little lighter: Philip Caputo: A Rumor of War Tim O'Brien: Going After Cacciato "Talk about drugs. Driving a car like that, going that fast, it’s like all the drugs at once." - Tommy Byrne "Now, Pinky, if by any chance you are captured during this mission, remember you are Gunther Heindriksen from Appenzell. You moved to Grindelwald to drive the cog train to Murren. Can you repeat that?" - The Brain Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 04/21/2012 10:11PM by wvonkessler. |
john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Elite Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
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