Here in East Tennessee anything in this video wouldn't be a surprise. My brother is a well known Redneck fix it all . He could take two tooth picks and somehow get a broke chainsaw running.
I once fixed a chainsaw that had a problem where you could no longer tighten the chain . The track along the adjustment area is made of plastic and had worn down to the point where it would no longer adjust . I fixed the problem by trimming a popsicle stick and pushing it into the track . Works like a champ !!
In the late 1980's I had bought quite a lot of CD's and I wanted to start storing them on a shelf . I looked around town and I did not like anything that I saw so I decided to make the shelves myself ! The first step is to find out the shelf styles and lengths available and then do a "3-D" drawing of my plan . I took wood shop in high school so I knew how to make this work . I found walnut grain shelves in four feet , three feet , and two feet lengths. My first shelf was four feet long by four feet high by eight inches thick . I wanted my shelf to be off the floor so I bought a closet dowel rod and cut it into several six inch pieces . I had completed my shelf and now it was time to finish my project ! I only had four legs on my shelf and as I began to fill the shelf , the center bowed down due to the weight of the CD's . I added four more legs spaced an equal distance apart to fix the bowing in the middle . I now had to fix the bowing in the middle of the other shelves by putting in a center divider all of the way down the middle of the shelf . I wasn't sure how to hold the dividers in place , so I used epoxy glue . This worked until I moved and all of them fell out . i finally devised a plan to have at least one end ( top or bottom ) screwed into one side of the shelf . I didn't want my CD's to be pushed all of the way back into the shelf so I bought small wooden trim wood so that the CD's would be right at the front edge of the shelf .
I made my own CD and DVD shelves and I wanted to mount them to the wall so that they would not fall once they were filled up . I had a very large number of CD's and DVD's and as I put the shelves close to the wall , I noticed a gap of about two inches from the wall . I needed a small spacer to mount the shelves properly so I went to the hardware store to look at metal spacers to use . The spacers that I looked at cost about $0.69 and I would need possibly a hundred which would cost way too much ! My solution was to buy a medium sized wooden dowel rod , cut it into two inch pieces , and drill a hole in them ! I used "L - shaped" brackets on the back of the shelves and had them spaced properly to fit into the stud walls . Once I was done , I pulled on the newly mounted shelves to verify that they would not fall !
Hey slow down a little bit so we can enjoy the silliness of it okay you go so fast you don't even have time to look at it and figure out what it is come on
Here in East Tennessee anything in this video wouldn't be a surprise. My brother is a well known Redneck fix it all . He could take two tooth picks and somehow get a broke chainsaw running.
I once fixed a chainsaw that had a problem where you could no longer tighten the chain . The track along
the adjustment area is made of plastic and had worn down to the point where it would no longer adjust .
I fixed the problem by trimming a popsicle stick and pushing it into the track . Works like a champ !!
If it's stupid but works, it ain't stupid.
The rebar spoke wheel actually looks kinda sick. Perfect for a rat rod.
In the late 1980's I had bought quite a lot of CD's and I wanted to start storing them on a shelf . I looked around town
and I did not like anything that I saw so I decided to make the shelves myself ! The first step is to find out the shelf
styles and lengths available and then do a "3-D" drawing of my plan . I took wood shop in high school so I knew how
to make this work . I found walnut grain shelves in four feet , three feet , and two feet lengths. My first shelf was four
feet long by four feet high by eight inches thick . I wanted my shelf to be off the floor so I bought a closet dowel rod
and cut it into several six inch pieces . I had completed my shelf and now it was time to finish my project ! I only had
four legs on my shelf and as I began to fill the shelf , the center bowed down due to the weight of the CD's . I added
four more legs spaced an equal distance apart to fix the bowing in the middle . I now had to fix the bowing in the
middle of the other shelves by putting in a center divider all of the way down the middle of the shelf . I wasn't sure
how to hold the dividers in place , so I used epoxy glue . This worked until I moved and all of them fell out . i finally
devised a plan to have at least one end ( top or bottom ) screwed into one side of the shelf . I didn't want my CD's
to be pushed all of the way back into the shelf so I bought small wooden trim wood so that the CD's would be right
at the front edge of the shelf .
I made my own CD and DVD shelves and I wanted to mount them to the wall so that they would not fall once they
were filled up . I had a very large number of CD's and DVD's and as I put the shelves close to the wall , I noticed a
gap of about two inches from the wall . I needed a small spacer to mount the shelves properly so I went to the
hardware store to look at metal spacers to use . The spacers that I looked at cost about $0.69 and I would need
possibly a hundred which would cost way too much ! My solution was to buy a medium sized wooden dowel rod ,
cut it into two inch pieces , and drill a hole in them ! I used "L - shaped" brackets on the back of the shelves and had
them spaced properly to fit into the stud walls . Once I was done , I pulled on the newly mounted shelves to verify
that they would not fall !
0:45 Frightens me too.
crutch tailgate- backed by "save money live better"🤣🤣
The contraption at 4.45 looks like some kind of sorting device?
You need to slow down switching the pictures, I need more time to study them just in case I might want to try one of these ideas
So the ads block the video at the end, great Sherlock.
the device at 4:90 it a tromel for seperating and sifting rocks from dirt for lawns
I had a hand powered one
plastic clamp on side cutters, when hand gets tired of cutting
Hey slow down a little bit so we can enjoy the silliness of it okay you go so fast you don't even have time to look at it and figure out what it is come on
4:46 A pedal powered rotary scrubber for panning gold?
I think it's a corn shucker. 🤨
It's for baling Christmas trees.
How are people allowed to drive these vehicles on the roads
Not all of them. The one was a moon rover. The astronauts actually did that modification.
Extra
Screenshots are too small for me to see..no sub.
0:26 WTF?
You're flipping your pictures way too fast it takes a minute to see what the hell we're supposed to see here anyways have a good day
Che tristezza