What did Santa bring you this year?

oldman45

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Nope, not everything but the best gift you got?

My daughter bought me a "511Tactical" dry rain shell. Never saw or heard of them before. Really neat for those of us that carry and work in the weather. Pull out ID panels. Three interpockets and four outer. Has two emergency sidearm accesses with quick releases. Best off, it is totally water tight.
 
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Among other things I got an Eye brand barlow knife!

Merry Christmas everyone. :)
OOPS, I almost forgot, a two pound bag of Jelly Belly's. Yay!
 
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An early clock-in time, 12 hrs comp time and 12 hrs of time and a half. Not to complain but he got me the same last year too. I really don't mind though, I have no family, so I'd rather work than someone who does have a family.

Merry Christmas!


p.s. I've seen A Christmas Story 3 times already today only 3 more times to go.
 
Here's one of my christmas present I got from my wife.

It's the S&W Special Ops knife.

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She found it by chance locally and bought it :)
 
My Christmas present was a winning bid on a Sturmey Archer bell crank:
$(KGrHqZHJBUE63VVJyzwBO5N38R1Kw~~60_0.


What is it, you may ask? The short answer is, it will facilitate the conversion of my FG4 Dynohub to five speeds. The hub will be laced into a 28-inch rim and will go on the rear of my Raleigh DL-1 to replace the three-speed that currently resides there:
img0646wl5.jpg


Five-speed conversions of the Sturmey AW 3-speed hub are not uncommon, but converted 4-speed dynohubs are quite rare. Some people who work on them do not even believe the conversion is possible, but it is. I know of two others.

Sorry, no pics of the hub. I had a shop session with my Sturmey guru the other evening. We stripped the hub (purchased on Ebay several months ago), he pronounced it fit for further use, and he took it back to his machine shop in the North woods of Minnesota.

Looking at the internal workings of one of these devices leaves one in awe at their ingenuity, which is fully the equal of the best gun designers.
.
 
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It was an early present.

I got this a couple of months ago under the agreement of an early Christmas present.

cub1.jpg


cub2.jpg


It's a 1949 Farmall Cub, but I think some of you may know that already. It's already in several pieces for restoring.

My wife did get me a couple of parts for it under the tree. I've never had a tractor before. I've always wanted one and it's very exciting.

Paul
 
Duke, that PRS is NICE! My friend in Myrtle Beach does all the inlay for PRS. Congrats!
 
I got this a couple of months ago under the agreement of an early Christmas present.

cub1.jpg


cub2.jpg


It's a 1949 Farmall Cub, but I think some of you may know that already. It's already in several pieces for restoring.

My wife did get me a couple of parts for it under the tree. I've never had a tractor before. I've always wanted one and it's very exciting.

Paul
That's a nice Cub Paul! Those Farmalls are rock solid and hardly ever quit! My uncle had 2 Super Cs and he ran the heck out of them.
 
So tell us about the new pair.

Just a couple orphans I spotted on Gunbroker that looked like they needed a home.

Lots of Gen 3 9mm's and 40's from police and security companies starting to show up these days at very attractive
prices.

I'll clean them up, and play with them for a while until I'm sure they are well-socialized. Then probably try to find a
good home for them.

I detail-cleaned one of them so far. Founds lots of clumps of green lint imbedded in just about every crevice. Fair
amount of sandy grit too. Haven't got all of that out yet. Probably will range-test it before I do too much more
cleaning.

When I "detail clean" I go beyond a field strip, but short of complete disassembly. I pull the selector lever and the
firing pin from the slide, and I pull the backstrap and hammer spring from the frame. Then I completely drown
everything in Break Free. Blot it dry and blow out the crevices with compressed air. Lightly go around all the corners
and cracks with a dental pick. That level of disassembly gets these types of guns to about 90% of the cleanness of a
full disassembly, but without the hole-stretching that can come from driving pins out of the frame and the slide.


I'll repeat the detail clean after the range trip. The process of firing a couple boxes of ammo should dislodge more grit.
 

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