mels
St. Peter's Lodge #21 New Milford, CT
Lookin' out for the "Old Timers GTG" thread!
Bring it over Mel. We will get her going. Those four strokes don't baffle me like these 2 strokes do[emoji12]Hadn't thought about a 'splitter. I've got a Franken(stein)splitter powered with a non-functioning Wisconsin THD that may find its' way to the CT GTG if anyone knows their way around an old THD it'd be a trip to get the thing running.
It's getting prettier. At the body shop getting painted. It sure is a nice truck though.Better yet, have Rich sell me that beautiful Dodge truck of his and I'll bring the splitter when I drop him back at your place
I see what you mean Bob, I was actually getting tired of bringing my ported saws and then watching Brett run one of his, not that it's a bad thing. This year believe it or not I was planing on just bringing the saws that I ported and my splitting toys.
Use your eyes and take an extra second. Never did understand why someone would try and improve on such a simple design.I would also like someone to share some ol' time wisdom and show me how to consistently work a Stihl flippy without having it on my pants leg.
Well spike, I'm going to miss your GTG. It's one i always counted on.
But on the other hand i completely understand. Most folks don't realize
what it takes to put on a good GTG. The work involved, Money it cost.
The clean up after. The wood you have to find. The food, etc. It can be
very over welming. There will never be a stop watch at my GTG's as well.
My theme is vintage but any saw is welcome. Yes i build saws and restore
them but only to stock. Nothing like a good ole vintage 100+ cc saw in your
hands throwin chips everywhere.
Lee
That IS cool. It's good to see something different like that.
I had a small GTG at the house a few years back and we did something that was a blast. I wouldn't be able to do this on a large scale, but what I did was have a few dead and torn down saws all boxed up. Deal was If you could get it running, it was yours to keep. It was fun and turned into a different kind of saw race: Who get's it running first. Couple guys hadn't been that deep into a saw, but everything went together the way it was supposed to. Only close call was someone got the handle screws confused with the cylinder bolts on a Jonsered 625 and was about to wreck his crankcase, but I noticed it just in time.
It also helped make the "hang out" time better. Like Mike said, it's hard to BS with each other if saws are screamiing non stop.
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