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#1156 | |
Supporter
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Scott City KS
Casino cash: $-1405266
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Posts: 59,935
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#1157 |
Rufus Dawes Jr.
Join Date: Aug 2000
Casino cash: $-1961821
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Interesting. Apparently we are about to put in a Kinetico Water softener, like you I'm rolling my eyes at the cost but my wife has wanted this since we built the house 10 years ago.
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Posts: 18,016
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#1158 |
SuperChiefs
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Florida
Casino cash: $-1420178
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Posts: 21,941
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#1159 |
SuperChiefs
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Florida
Casino cash: $-1420178
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Posts: 21,941
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#1160 |
Reset
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Parts Unknown
Casino cash: $6956765
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My hot water heater is about 5 years old. I had the pressure relief valve replaced about 4 years ago. It was leaking. But the tank keeps making weird noises after a shower and such. I just turned down the heater on it. All I need is a 40 gallon hot water rocket flying around the house
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Posts: 22,276
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#1161 | |
Reset
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Parts Unknown
Casino cash: $6956765
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Quote:
Thanks for scaring the shit outta me handyman’s!!! |
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Posts: 22,276
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#1162 | |
SuperChiefs
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Florida
Casino cash: $-1420178
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Posts: 21,941
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#1163 | |
Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Ohio
Casino cash: $-1659600
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Quote:
![]() Seriously, your relief valve could be a symptom. Have you checked you total house water pressure? Many people have faulted PRV in their houses but don't know about it. It shows up as weird leaks and noises. This was further compounded a few years back when most municipalities increased the pressure in their main water lines. I find mine needs to be replaced every 4-6 years now. I check my pressures every couple of months to insure the pressure is holding at my set point (55 psi for me as I like the pressure a little high). |
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Posts: 1,894
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#1164 |
Sauntering Vaguely Downwards
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Columbia, Mo
Casino cash: $-670901
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Thinking of making a new fish tank stand w/ a shitload of walnut I've acquired. I want to put some flourishes on it and am thinking a nice arc along the bottom would look good.
But I have a 130 gal tank so the stand is gonna need to be 6 ft wide. The arc needs to be proportional to the stand so I'm thinking about 4 inches high from the base. So a circle jig for the router is out - it'd need to be about 12 feet long to get a long enough arc. I could try to build an eliptical jig but even that would probably need to be about 8 feet long; maybe 6 depending on the second pivot point (my math skills fail me trying to figure that one out; would take some serious trial and error...) Anyone have a better idea for cutting a long arc? Best alternative I can come up with is a shop-made drawing bow, tracing the arc, getting as close as I can with a jigsaw and then doing some real careful spindle sander work. Surely there's a better way to do this but I'll be damned if I can come up with it. Thoughts?
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"If there's a god, he's laughing at us.....and our football team..." "When you look at something through rose colored glasses, all the red flags just look like flags." |
Posts: 66,735
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#1165 | ||
Reset
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Parts Unknown
Casino cash: $6956765
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Posts: 22,276
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#1166 | |
Supporter
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Scott City KS
Casino cash: $-1405266
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Posts: 59,935
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#1167 |
Sauntering Vaguely Downwards
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Columbia, Mo
Casino cash: $-670901
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I think I might have this figured out.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJ09XPqBX28 Building that track rig at the bottom of my workpiece and then making a 3.5 ft circle jig might get the job done. I just set it for a 3 ft radius circle but then put a second pivot point about 4 inches from the router bit, I can I keep that second pivot in the horizontal track while making a nice long 3-ft run for the perpendicular track and the 'bottom' pivot point. That SHOULD give me a 6 foot arc that's held flat by the 2nd pivot wheel tracking along that horizontal run. And at that point I'm manually forcing the shape, so I don't have to **** around with the math. So that oughta be an interesting experiment that I'm sure I'll just give up on...
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"If there's a god, he's laughing at us.....and our football team..." "When you look at something through rose colored glasses, all the red flags just look like flags." |
Posts: 66,735
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#1168 |
Sauntering Vaguely Downwards
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Columbia, Mo
Casino cash: $-670901
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Carpenters have been doing this shit for a hundred years without CNC routers.
I knew there had to be a way to do it - spend a week with someone that really knows their stuff and you'll just be blown away by the tricks they have figured out. I should just ask my dad's buddy - he's a trim carpenter turned general contractor who knows all kinds of cool jigs and stuff.
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"If there's a god, he's laughing at us.....and our football team..." "When you look at something through rose colored glasses, all the red flags just look like flags." |
Posts: 66,735
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#1169 | |
Supporter
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Scott City KS
Casino cash: $-1405266
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Posts: 59,935
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#1170 |
Turning the Corner
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Springfield, Missouri
Casino cash: $-751459
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Tell us how you’re cutting the arc?
If a router, you can either cut a template using a 12ft scrap secured to your router and your floor or a bench leg or whatever. Then use that template to guide your bearing on the router. Or you can use the 12ft scrap to guide your router on the actual piece. If a jigsaw, then draw your line using the long pivot, cut your arc, clean up with spokeshaves or a circular plane (Stanley #113 or #20.) Mind your grain direction. Another way to make your arc is something you already, a thin piece of almost anything will flex evenly and you can put on nail in the middle and one nail on each end to establish the curve. Draw your arc from that. The real carpenters will chime in shortly. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Posts: 2,387
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