Quote from: Robbie8666 on 05 December 2018, 07:16:28 amarranged a date for Friday night!! 1st time in 10 years!!
arranged a date for Friday night!! 1st time in 10 years!!
Nice
Cheers for the info Sharpie. The ACF50 should arrive by Friday, so will do the deed over the W/End.Chain sprockets and drive train area clean to get all the old chain lube off tomorrow, inc inside the front sprocket case.Drained Standard fuel out of the bike and shoved it in the car, then filled the FZS tank up with 'Super High Octane' fuel, put in Sta-Bil fuel stabiliser and a good slug of Marvel Mystery Oil then ran it for 10 or 15 minutes after the oil and filter change to get the stabilised fuel right through the system and the new engine oil filter full.
Quote from: tommyardin on 05 December 2018, 09:40:20 amNiceI would
Quote from: tommyardin on 04 December 2018, 11:57:57 pmCheers for the info Sharpie. The ACF50 should arrive by Friday, so will do the deed over the W/End.Chain sprockets and drive train area clean to get all the old chain lube off tomorrow, inc inside the front sprocket case.Drained Standard fuel out of the bike and shoved it in the car, then filled the FZS tank up with 'Super High Octane' fuel, put in Sta-Bil fuel stabiliser and a good slug of Marvel Mystery Oil then ran it for 10 or 15 minutes after the oil and filter change to get the stabilised fuel right through the system and the new engine oil filter full. Never used the aerosol can type. The small spray unit you get with the bottle, it comes out as a jet, not a spray. I been using it for years, and found the best way is to buy a bottle and invest in one of those small low pressure spray guns, usually hundreds of them for sale at bike shows etc. Warm the ACF50 up first in a bucket of hot water to make it flow easier, it makes a difference. Air pressure no more than 5psi, comes out as a very fine spray. You can then get it under the tank, inside the frame, everywhere really. Bin liners over the wheels and brakes first. All done in half an hour. Ragging it on takes ages and you cant reach all areas.
Quote arranged a date for Friday night!! 1st time in 10 years!! Me too. Hope the wife doesn't find out
Here is a good indication of how good ACF50 is. These are the ends of my mini scaffold tower I cleaned them up well over 2 years ago and on one stem I smeared ACF50 and I left the others. Can you spot the one that had the ACF50 They are stored in a dry area and so are not subject to rain washing off any ACF50 but the area does get damp.
Quote from: fazersharp on 06 December 2018, 03:10:38 pmHere is a good indication of how good ACF50 is. These are the ends of my mini scaffold tower I cleaned them up well over 2 years ago and on one stem I smeared ACF50 and I left the others. Can you spot the one that had the ACF50 They are stored in a dry area and so are not subject to rain washing off any ACF50 but the area does get damp.Hey! Surely that is not a wall at 'Sharp Manor' not exactly period is it, iron rubbed in mortar joints is modern, it became popular in the sixties,.I was expecting lime mortar with pencil joints, big stone arches with massive key stone bricks, tiled Kneelers at the bases of all the gables.Sharpie have you been bullshitting us as to your heritage. Oh! The AFC50 has done a great job of protecting the tower.
Quote[/size]arranged a date for Friday night!! 1st time in 10 years!! Me too. Hope the wife doesn't find out </blockquote>hope her husband don't find out either!!
Quote Quotearranged a date for Friday night!! 1st time in 10 years!! Me too. Hope the wife doesn't find out </blockquote>hope her husband don't find out either!! He might hit you with his white stick
Quotearranged a date for Friday night!! 1st time in 10 years!! Me too. Hope the wife doesn't find out </blockquote>hope her husband don't find out either!!
Quote from: tommyardin on 07 December 2018, 10:05:25 amQuote from: fazersharp on 06 December 2018, 03:10:38 pmHere is a good indication of how good ACF50 is. These are the ends of my mini scaffold tower I cleaned them up well over 2 years ago and on one stem I smeared ACF50 and I left the others. Can you spot the one that had the ACF50 They are stored in a dry area and so are not subject to rain washing off any ACF50 but the area does get damp.Hey! Surely that is not a wall at 'Sharp Manor' not exactly period is it, iron rubbed in mortar joints is modern, it became popular in the sixties,.I was expecting lime mortar with pencil joints, big stone arches with massive key stone bricks, tiled Kneelers at the bases of all the gables.Sharpie have you been bullshitting us as to your heritage. Oh! The AFC50 has done a great job of protecting the tower. Its the storage mews - and they are metric bricks - you of all people should of spotted that one.
Yeah Metric gauge is tighter than Imperial by 1.2mm per course of bricks, that is why building an extension on a imperial gauged house with metric bricks when they were the standard was a bastard as you either, lost gauge again the main house or you ended up with large bed joint to keep up. Seeing as you new brickwork bonded/tied into the original you ended up with large bed joints , of course on a complete new build it was not a problem.
Zzzzzzzzzzz
Quote from: tommyardin on 07 December 2018, 07:02:50 pmYeah Metric gauge is tighter than Imperial by 1.2mm per course of bricks, that is why building an extension on a imperial gauged house with metric bricks when they were the standard was a bastard as you either, lost gauge again the main house or you ended up with large bed joint to keep up. Seeing as you new brickwork bonded/tied into the original you ended up with large bed joints , of course on a complete new build it was not a problem.On an old building with new brick extension and if you are not bonding/tieing in which forces you to keep up. Which looks uglier - deeper beds to try and keep up or mismatched brick to brick.
RUDEIf you are bored go and find some anti brexit propaganda cartoons to post on the brexit thread