the Moen valve in this video is called a, "Posi-Temp" which uses a 1222 cartridge which sells for about 80 dollars...prior to the development of the "Posi-temp" valve, Moen's push/pull Moentrol valve used the 1225 cartridge which sells for about 35 dollars...the 1222 cartridge has the balancing spool built into the cartridge, whereas the valve that uses the 1225 cartridge has the balancing spool #1423 is separate and cost about 50 dollars...to solve the lack of or unbalance of water flow in either valve can be solved easily done in the Posi-Temp with a cartridge change because it contains the balancing spool...BUT IF IT'S A PUSH/PULL MOENTROL VALVE THAT USES THE 1225 CARTRIDGE YOU WILL NEED TO UNSTICK OR REPLACE #1423 BALANCING SPOOL...BUT IF YOU'RE SOLVING A DRIPPING VALVE ON EITHER OR VALVES REPLACING THE CARTRIDGES WILL FIX THE ISSUE BUT NOT A UNBALANCE ISSUE
LOL scared of aceton... Its the keton your body produces and uses the most of any keton. actually if you fast for a couple if days you could probably just blow on the headlights to melt them. Thats why you get bad breath when on keto diet, because your breath is aceton....
Repeat the test, but find an old headlight assembly off a junk car. It HAS to be polycarbonate plastic. MEK is a wicked paint stripper that burns like hell if you get even a tiny smear on your skin … what’s worse, soap and water won’t wash it off! I found out the hard way that 91% isopropyl alcohol rinses it off pretty well, and I suspect methyl alcohol would work as well but I never tried it. You said, and did, some things that imply your knowledge of materials science and organic chemistry in general are severely lacking, and simply trusting your ‘comfort level’ while you play around with potentially dangerous things you don’t know much about could result in some really bad consequences. It’s just my opinion, but I would advise you to bone up, or stand down. Consider teaming up with someone with some knowledge and expertise. You never know- there could be a retired chemistry professor or petroleum engineer who is lonely and bored living right down the street or around the corner. The amount of free advice, experience, knowledge and skill available on just RU-vid is nothing short of astonishing.
Channel lock is a brand just like Kleenex is a brand the tool he was using is referred to as a joint groove pliers, although most people in the trade Refer to those as channel locks
Our model is exactly the same as your. But when we want to take the handle our, after unscrewed . The handle just stuck, cannot take it out, any tips before moving to next steps . Thanks
This is an amazing video, I was thinking about doing this myself when I stumbled upon this design! I think I might try and take it one step further and add the LED display to display height as well! Thanks again!
Thanks for the idea, I made one though it is slightly different than yours but just as effective. I posted a video of mine here ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_UED2iFFsKk.html
Cool. I had been considering changing my 4' florescent shop lights to LEDs. Seeing this though has made me reconsider that. My florescent lights work just fine and as my shop is painted white I have plenty of light in there. I guess if it ain't broke I shouldn't fix it, lol. Heck, one bank of them is probably as old as I am with a big sand ballast resistor in it and still works fine.
I wonder if one of those new red link pin style belts would offer less vibration as they have no "memory". What brand riser block did you use on your saw if you don't mind my asking? I have a Delta 28-276 and have been wanting to make these same changes to mine.
I think a good shop vac with a larger suction nozzle like you used equipped with an adjustable air bleed (to adjust vacuum so it won’t pick p the rocks) would work too.
Older video, I know, but they actually sell a kit to do this (about $90). Comes with the cup (similar to the one you use), sanding blocks, chemical, etc. It's worth noting that this kit's sanding blocks go up to 2,000 grit. I'd try repeating your experiment, but sand up to 2,000 grit, then try it.
Great video! But if I instead use 1x4 pine boards for the frame (no table saw), wouldn’t there be an extra inch where the 3” thick insulation would flop around?
1x4 boards are actually 0.75″ x 3.5″ so there would only be an extra half inch. And with how fluffy the insulation is, I don't think there'd be any flopping around with that little bit of extra depth. Cheers!
Thanks for posting your informative video. What I really got out of it, was maintaining speed while gaining strength by controlling everything with pulleys. It's almost like mechanical advantage in reverse, sort of , I guess, oh whatever, ... it was cool to watch.
They're not that great of a tool in my opinion. They're prone to clogging and breaking, and you carry the bag that they fill so you've gotta lug around all the weight you suck up. Also that bag is pretty small and can be hard to empty.
@@42Pursuit that is a well thought out response, and i agree with your response, particularly the bag is heavy and awkward and clogging. Thanks for sharing knowledge
Much finer emery paper 800, 1000, 1500 grit and graduate to fine steel wool. Remember it is UV damage your removing. No need to use jackhammer style muscle on the sanding part!....Meaning do not put pressure when sanding! You'll gouge deep grooves. Back and forth even passes in a uniform manner, then up and down passes. Rinse surface well and allow to dry. You'll end up with much better results. The grits that were used in this video are ridiculously too coarse.They would work for taking rust off of steel.But that's not the situation here.
This is absolutely brilliant! I wish I had seen this video sooner! Had just ordered a worm gear last week, after hemming and hawing between the worm gear and the nema motor. Went with the worm gear bc I've never programmed an arduino before. However, if my simple circuitry plans fall through, I'm definitely going to go with your plans. Heck, I may just scrap it altogether anyway and go with your design. Soooooo much incredible functionality! Thank you so much for posting this.