United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Talk about your cars etc here. Keep it sort of sensible and on topic please.
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

I am right up there with you guys

Slept and been in worse.

Part of my 🇺🇸 road tripping modus operandi.
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

So the Caddy continues to deliver great service both as a cheap daily (cost me £1200.00 as it stands)  and as a load lugger and functional tool. 


Amazingly I saw it early, and bought by it mid October. 
Making it 6 months ago. 
So in doing basic man maths, (which usually includes insurance and fuel) the car as it stands on the driveway cost me £200.00 per month. If you include insurance pro-rated to 6 months and diesel it probably comes to an unscientific £250.00 per month. 
The longer and more  it works here, the cheaper it effectively becomes. 


So a tip run to dispose of my two lodger spare room double bed mattresses and two large TV’s, two TV stands, cardboard and polystyrene resulted in me scavenging out of the metal disposal bin (with permission, in the UK where I live, you can be prosecuted for removing a paperclip.) a small rotten kids size cast metal garden bench. 


Bench as seen and into the Caddy before I got rid of the mattresses. 


Image Image


Back home I quickly unloaded my treasure and took stock of what I had. 
Hmmmmmmmm……?? 


Why do I do this every time? 


Image

Image



Coffee and a digestive, chat with a buddy, check email etc  

Then headed out to go play  

Disassembling with caution as its old and I really don’t like breaking stuff like this  

Also headed into my secret wood store to find some correct wood. Something the right thickness, texture etc  I love old bed frames, IKEA shelving  and such as its already planed, smooth and usually good quality, so the Caddy could pick those up when you drive by  



Image

Image

After preparing the wood I cleaned up the rest of the frame and proceeded with etch primer and then painted the parts  

Originally I had some dull blue to use but the can (was 50p years ago on an end of production sale)  kept failing  

I eventually switched to a can of burgundy, which actually turned out to be a good choice  



Image

Image



Overnight the paint dried nicely. 

So yesterday I continued with assembly 

And this was the loose assembly. 


Image



And finally completed. 

Looking a lot better than 18 hours before. 


Image


Stepping back, I noticed that there was more to do. 


So another piece of wood liberated from the store. 


My £20.00 bootfair router from a weekend away about 10 years ago came out, along with a sander Mickey threw out years ago. 


So I made and detailed a name plate for the grandkids. Sally’s, not mine. 
Harry is 5 years old and Alfie 9 months old. 


After a quick practice session I free handed the names. 


Image


drilled holes in the sides just for detail  

Painted…….



Image​​​​​​​



And finally the 24 hour turn around  

If I were to value my time, this becomes an extremely expensive bench for a couple of kids that are not even related to me  



Image


Delivered to Sallys place  

Now she wants one in adult size as well  

Looks great with the sand box I fixed last week  



​​​​​​​Not sure what to do today  
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

Cut the grass at number 1 position yesterday. 


I tend to keep to setting number 2 throughout winter to keep it tidy. 


I also washed and polished the Astro van as I was heading out to a late afternoon (4.30 onwards) car gathering about 30 miles from here. 


I also had some multi ton lifting straps to deliver to mate Darren, so the van was being used as a van. 


I keep saying it but I do love this thing  



Pleasure to own, drive and look at  



Image



Image



Got to go fill it up before leaving, despite still showing a 1/4 tank of petrol. My dad brought me up not to leave on any trip with less than 1/2 a tank and to replace a battery the first time it refused to start a car.


Do remember that this is an American commercial vehicle that would have been destined to do loads of long distance work  so a 30 liter fuel tank would not have been needed  



Image



The trip there and back was pretty good, van loving to hover right around the legal speed limit,

I have had this dancing Elvis for years  and he made me chuckle when the road conditions made him move about erratically as only Elvis did  

Sad reflection on the state of our roads  

And also points a finger straight at local councils who continue to squander our taxes on non important things while allowing the infrastructure to fall apart  



Image

I made a short video, including some pics of the cars that came out, despite the crappy weather  

There was a relatively large contingent of Toyota Celicas and Corollas. Mostly rough, but all someone’s pride and joy  

VIDEO LINK  


Today is Sunday, not yet decided what slow job to get going in this morning  



Thanks for checking in and any comments  
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

Summer is coming.

Antihistamines and cutting grass.

Also parts of the garden waking up, bringing once a year beauty in the form of certain flowers and plants making their reappearance.

Image

I just couldn’t get going yesterday.

Opened my woodwork shop and started dragging parts out to build an oil can ukelele with.

Mickey popped around, twice.

We had coffee, chatted, I enjoyed the distraction as I really wasn’t feeling the shop.
I searched for a small cheap, working ride on mower for him. Unsuccessfully.
I am sure Wolf tools used to make an extremely simple one, but finding something that works is not that easy.
Then went around to his place to help him lift some stuff in his garage.
He is 78. Years old and forgetd that he is slowly getting older.

He offered me a gazebo frame, before he scraps it.

So I now need to order a 3x3 meter canvas roof for it.

Could be useful when working on the C10 outside in the sun, if we have a summer.

Image

Of course after all the wind and drizzling rain the van once again looks like a step child, grubby and neglected.

But I did take a few pics and took some measurements……

Based on a conversation I was having with a long time friend.

My Suburban comes in right around 80 inches to the tyres, The ##### is 79.5(ish) to the widest point on the arches and the K5 Blazer is about 79.5 too (not including mirrors on any of them!). Makes the Jag and Merc look positively skinny!

Always something brewing.

Image

When I reverse (the only way I park cars out back) down the alley, the mirrors both have to be folded in.

You can’t get down there unless you have done that.


Image


Measurement of the alleyway.

You need to subtract 3 inches from the 80 inches to accommodate the boiler pipe and windowsill on the one side.

Image

Life’s challenges ehhh??

Saved by the tape measure?

Have a good week.
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

Jobs that I really hate.

Pressure washing all of my concrete surfaces every year.

Then sanding in all the joints with kiln dried sand.

For those who have no idea, a lot of my hard standing surfaces have what is known as block paving.
Small individual bricks laid and compacted as driveway.
Pretty, but a bastardo to clean up yearly.
Those in sunny climates like Africa, Australia and lots of the USA will never understand.


Moss and fungus, weeds and whatever can germinate will grow there in the grooves, so you need to spray poison like Roundup or pull the weeds twice a season as well.

When you then come with the pressure cleaner, and I buy the most powerful one you can get for the money, you blast all the sand, moss, roots of weeds out.
Keep in mind that every brick has four bevelled edges to deal with plus the flat, mossy green top surface.

Yup………

I hate it.

Takes me three days to do all of it.

Keeping in mind you cover everything in a 10 meter radius in sh!t and constantly have to go back to clean where you left off. The amount of debris from the cleaning builds up so sweeping it up, collecting the dirt etc is more time consuming.


LAST THING.

I am 1.83m or 6 foot tall.

The lance or sprayer is made for a 1.65m or 5’5” short person. So you are bending over all the time to get the nozzle working 80-100mm off the ground. Don’t tell me about those sexy round brush things. THEY DON’T WORK for my application.

So I started at the garage. First job…….
Clear all my junk, left after the big clear out the last few weeks.
Clear a years worth of leaves and dirt under the hedge.

Then start the torture.

What you have after a year.

Junk moved.

Image

The target.

Image

Image

Image

Takes time.

The before and after images give an idea of how important this actually is.

Never looks that bad, till you start.

Image

Two hours to do this section so far.

Image

Next day some more.

Image

Once it is dry, the idea is to sweep and brush kiln dried sand into the grooves.
This prevents stones moving once you drive over them.

Image

Wet sand is not ideal.
But I paid for it, so I would use it. Right?

Garage area done.

Image

Concrete strips next.

Image

Video shows it a bit weird but trust me…… horrible job.

Then area behind the kitchen, followed by alleyway and out front.

Kitchen parking done.

Image

Front area.

Bloody storm winds were not helpful.

Image

Image

Almost done.

By this point, I was cold, sore and tired.

But I finished the rest of the drive.


Image


Next job was to grab the VW Caddy and go fetch a massive wooden double bed frame.

The rest was good, but I almost couldn’t get out the van I was so stiff and sore.

Loving this van doing it’s job.

Image



So next job is to go buy some fresh kiln dried sand for the driveway block paving.

Till next year.


Three days worth of work in 6 minutes video.


Enjoy.




Thanks for watching.
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
User avatar
mercrocker
Numb3rP14t3Fun
Posts: 17070
Joined: Fri May 17, 2019 2:53 pm
Has thanked: 12298 times
Been thanked: 8704 times

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by mercrocker »

Always enjoy your posts, Grizz. That bench looks brilliant, there are always a load of those up the tip with rotten timbers, if I were half as industrious as you I might think about rescuing one.....
There's a great long bar in Rock & Roll heaven.......
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

mercrocker wrote: Thu Apr 11, 2024 11:57 am Always enjoy your posts, Grizz. That bench looks brilliant, there are always a load of those up the tip with rotten timbers, if I were half as industrious as you I might think about rescuing one.....
Thank you.

I am driven by guilt, so when I do nothing, I feel guilty.

Its not cheap to rebuild a bench, hardwood especially is expensive.

So pine, softer, less weather resistant is the alternative.

I have a beautiful vintage cast iron end set, but it will be expensive to restore.
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
User avatar
mercrocker
Numb3rP14t3Fun
Posts: 17070
Joined: Fri May 17, 2019 2:53 pm
Has thanked: 12298 times
Been thanked: 8704 times

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by mercrocker »

I still have my Grandfather's softwood bench, he passed away 30 years ago so it dates well before that. Yearly painting and winter cover has seen it last this long.....
There's a great long bar in Rock & Roll heaven.......
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

mercrocker wrote: Sat Apr 13, 2024 8:13 am I still have my Grandfather's softwood bench, he passed away 30 years ago so it dates well before that. Yearly painting and winter cover has seen it last this long.....
That sounds great.

Looking after your stuff.
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
User avatar
Grizz
Posts: 191
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2024 10:40 am
Location: Kent
Has thanked: 144 times
Been thanked: 236 times
Contact:

Re: United States of GRIZZ - Just how random do you want it?

Post by Grizz »

Final part of the pressure cleaning job.

Wait for a sunny day, wait for pathways to be dry or even warm this time of year.

Slow, systemic and meticulous spreading of the sand, and cleaning away all the excess.

Gaps up to 7mm where heavy stuff like a loaded Transit van used to park daily for years, creating grooves and movement of the stones.

Image

Then start high, spread the sand in a way you can push it about with the large yard broom.

Image

Done.

Till next year.

Image

Short video for those who like it.




Friday evening was good, typically beautiful sunset as we have this time of the year.

Image

Perfect weather for my first BBQ or Braai of the year tonight.

Summer soon.

I hope.
If you can’t fix it with a hammer, you have an electrical problem mate.
Post Reply