Yes you should be ashamed! Actual practical knowledge of beautiful old things when we're trying to make muffler bearing and squeegee sharpener jokes?I apologize for the thread hijack.
Yes you should be ashamed! Actual practical knowledge of beautiful old things when we're trying to make muffler bearing and squeegee sharpener jokes?I apologize for the thread hijack.
Its a oil filter cutter.
Here is an engine similar to the one I worked on as a teenager.
Flathead 6 Continental style
The Frazer's engine is coming along. The crankshaft I bought on ebay is the right one, and I had similar good luck with the main and rod bea...www.dogwalkfinds.com
This is the car my Dad had, ours was blue.
View attachment 218996
Seeing that tool brought back memories of the coolest car my family ever owned.
I apologize for the thread hijack.
Just had to throw that card didn't you?
That looks like a radius setting tool. I assume the movable part is a roller also. I have a very similar tool (but smaller) for putting the proper radius on Guitar fret wire so that it rests in the radius of the guitar neck. It is a far more accurate method than trying to pound them in and having to file the pieces into perfect alignment.
Creedmoor for the win.Its a oil filter cutter.
My Dad had a Kaiser too, a little older than that one, and also blue. I remember to open the doors from the inside you pushed a big button with a buffalo on it.Here is an engine similar to the one I worked on as a teenager.
Flathead 6 Continental style
The Frazer's engine is coming along. The crankshaft I bought on ebay is the right one, and I had similar good luck with the main and rod bea...www.dogwalkfinds.com
This is the car my Dad had, ours was blue.
View attachment 218996
Seeing that tool brought back memories of the coolest car my family ever owned.
I apologize for the thread hijack.
That looks like a radius setting tool. I assume the movable part is a roller also. I have a very similar tool (but smaller) for putting the proper radius on Guitar fret wire so that it rests in the radius of the guitar neck. It is a far more accurate method than trying to pound them in and having to file the pieces into perfect alignment.
PS, I just looked up Creedmore's answer, if the movable part is a cutting wheel, Creedmore is right, oil filter cutter. I cannot imagine why anyone would need that kind of tool.
It does a cut without filings so when inspecting the filter material, its not been compromised.That looks like a radius setting tool. I assume the movable part is a roller also. I have a very similar tool (but smaller) for putting the proper radius on Guitar fret wire so that it rests in the radius of the guitar neck. It is a far more accurate method than trying to pound them in and having to file the pieces into perfect alignment.
PS, I just looked up Creedmore's answer, if the movable part is a cutting wheel, Creedmore is right, oil filter cutter. I cannot imagine why anyone would need that kind of tool.
I am looking for binker fluid. I am having trouble finding it since everyone is going to LED's.It's used for adjusting muffler bearings.
Did anyone ask you about your personal life?It does a cut without filings so when inspecting the filter material, its not been compromised.
Got one of those out in the shop.
If its really big and black, it most likely looks like an open door/manhole allready.Got one of those out in the shop.
Mine's bigger.
And black.
Boy if that isn't an INGO open door then I don't know what is.
Saw an aircraft owner change his oil on a youtube channel and he used one and explained why. Haven't found anything interesting yet- and I hope to not find anything.It does a cut without filings so when inspecting the filter material, its not been compromised.
I am looking for binker fluid. I am having trouble finding it since everyone is going to LED's.
PS, I just looked up Creedmore's answer, if the movable part is a cutting wheel, Creedmore is right, oil filter cutter. I cannot imagine why anyone would need that kind of tool.