Author Topic: Cool Tools.  (Read 102344 times)

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Offline willbird

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #700 on: February 04, 2026, 06:46:24 AM »
the one with missing pulls is actually a Union brand box

https://share.google/9FEWtVaoBoao7JCLq

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #701 on: February 04, 2026, 06:53:15 AM »
My wife collects old “printers drawers”. I refinish them as gifts. This one is in our mudroom and has a small trinket from every trip we’ve ever taken.

Offline willbird

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #702 on: February 04, 2026, 07:10:34 AM »
My wife collects old “printers drawers”. I refinish them as gifts. This one is in our mudroom and has a small trinket from every trip we’ve ever taken.

That is nifty :-). some stuff like that one might not recognize until they knew what it was.When I was a kid a friend of my dads had a working Linotype machine in his garage, the whole family was kind of the pain in the butt type of people so I never actually saw the machine itself. I have melted a lot of linotype to cast into projectiles. The machines cast out portions of a sentence which were all assembled up into what was needed to print a whole page. 

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #703 on: February 04, 2026, 07:14:43 AM »
Interesting fact: All the printers drawers are exactly the same layout. When a typesetter stood at the set up table, no matter what drawer he pulled (for all the different fonts) the letters were in the same slot. Slot sizes are determined by frequency of use/page. Vowels had the largest and “Z” the smallest…..

When I take them apart to repair and refinish I usually find at least a few of the old lead sets jammed in somewhere.
« Last Edit: February 04, 2026, 07:16:56 AM by BenelliSEI »

Offline grcamna2

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #704 on: February 04, 2026, 07:42:39 AM »
My wife collects old “printers drawers”. I refinish them as gifts. This one is in our mudroom and has a small trinket from every trip we’ve ever taken.

I Like that.  :)
75' CB400F/'bunch o' parts'
  I love the small ones too !
Do your BEST...nobody can take that away from you.

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #705 on: February 04, 2026, 01:50:06 PM »
Here’s how the laser chain alignment tool works (see my earlier post #672). Strong magnets hold it to the sprocket. I have this one set just right, so the red beam touches the top of the outer chain face all the way to the drive sprocket. Very “cool tool”.
« Last Edit: February 04, 2026, 01:52:27 PM by BenelliSEI »

Offline Alan F.

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #706 on: February 04, 2026, 03:31:45 PM »
My wife collects old “printers drawers”. I refinish them as gifts. This one is in our mudroom and has a small trinket from every trip we’ve ever taken.

That looks great, nice collection.

When I read your post my mind somehow drifter to these: pic

How silly would it be to make a wall hung shelf from those and have it turn into the next big thing with latest generation.

Offline spotty

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #707 on: February 04, 2026, 04:10:17 PM »
Here’s how the laser chain alignment tool works (see my earlier post #672). Strong magnets hold it to the sprocket. I have this one set just right, so the red beam touches the top of the outer chain face all the way to the drive sprocket. Very “cool tool”.

what happens with alloy or nylon sprockets ?
i blame Terry

Offline grcamna2

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #708 on: February 04, 2026, 04:55:51 PM »
Here’s how the laser chain alignment tool works (see my earlier post #672). Strong magnets hold it to the sprocket. I have this one set just right, so the red beam touches the top of the outer chain face all the way to the drive sprocket. Very “cool tool”.

I appreciate this demonstration.
75' CB400F/'bunch o' parts'
  I love the small ones too !
Do your BEST...nobody can take that away from you.

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #709 on: February 04, 2026, 06:44:47 PM »
Here’s how the laser chain alignment tool works (see my earlier post #672). Strong magnets hold it to the sprocket. I have this one set just right, so the red beam touches the top of the outer chain face all the way to the drive sprocket. Very “cool tool”.

what happens with alloy or nylon sprockets ?

Hold it? Double sided tape….?

Offline dave500

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #710 on: February 04, 2026, 10:57:29 PM »
powerfull magnet on the other side.

Offline willbird

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #711 on: February 05, 2026, 05:48:25 AM »
Here’s how the laser chain alignment tool works (see my earlier post #672). Strong magnets hold it to the sprocket. I have this one set just right, so the red beam touches the top of the outer chain face all the way to the drive sprocket. Very “cool tool”.

I ordered one up from Ebay....

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #712 on: February 05, 2026, 07:20:38 AM »
powerfull magnet on the other side.

Clever.

Offline britman

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #713 on: February 05, 2026, 09:23:42 AM »
Jims Fork Filling Tool #740.  Hook a Mity Vac to it pump it up to 23-25 pounds of pressure, turn the lever after filling the container with the correct amount of fork oil, and fill the fork through the drain holes.  It is sold on a couple of Harley sites and the main selling point is you do not have to pull all of upper tin work on Glide and other HD forks like my Servi Car to get to the fork caps.  It is also a long process if you fill from the top since the early fork tubes have to be filled very slowly.  The manual suggests making a contraction with a funnel and rubber stopper and let it hang overnight, seriously. 

This damn thing sells for ridiculous money but I found this one used on Facebook Market Place and of course the seller said he had used it and it worked great but he had sold his bike and just wanted it gone.  It has been too cold to give it a try, but will post the results when I do.  Yes I am a sucker for weird tools you only use occasionally, the ones you can never remember where you put them when the time comes for use.........




Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #714 on: February 23, 2026, 05:04:36 AM »
My wife collects old “printers drawers”. I refinish them as gifts. This one is in our mudroom and has a small trinket from every trip we’ve ever taken.

That looks great, nice collection.

When I read your post my mind somehow drifter to these: pic

How silly would it be to make a wall hung shelf from those and have it turn into the next big thing with latest generation.

Alan….. Missed this initially. Made me laugh out loud! I recall they were always empty?

Offline MRieck

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #715 on: February 23, 2026, 05:37:44 AM »
Jims Fork Filling Tool #740.  Hook a Mity Vac to it pump it up to 23-25 pounds of pressure, turn the lever after filling the container with the correct amount of fork oil, and fill the fork through the drain holes.  It is sold on a couple of Harley sites and the main selling point is you do not have to pull all of upper tin work on Glide and other HD forks like my Servi Car to get to the fork caps.  It is also a long process if you fill from the top since the early fork tubes have to be filled very slowly.  The manual suggests making a contraction with a funnel and rubber stopper and let it hang overnight, seriously. 

This damn thing sells for ridiculous money but I found this one used on Facebook Market Place and of course the seller said he had used it and it worked great but he had sold his bike and just wanted it gone.  It has been too cold to give it a try, but will post the results when I do.  Yes I am a sucker for weird tools you only use occasionally, the ones you can never remember where you put them when the time comes for use.........
Jims makes some nice tools....I have 2 sets of their ratcheting ring compressors. Yeah....they don't give that stuff away.😆
Owner of the "Million Dollar CB"

Offline dave500

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #716 on: March 04, 2026, 12:24:03 AM »
Ive used a modified work lamp stand for ages as a temporary fuel tank holder and vacuum sync rig for years,the tank was a bit small volume maybe 500 ml,I up graded it to maybe a full litre?the fill neck is on a better angle aswell,using tanks from used lawn equipment weed wackers etc.
« Last Edit: March 04, 2026, 12:27:44 AM by dave500 »

Offline jlh3rd

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #717 on: March 04, 2026, 03:22:49 AM »
My wife collects old “printers drawers”. I refinish them as gifts. This one is in our mudroom and has a small trinket from every trip we’ve ever taken.

that's nice.
we have refrigerator magnets of trips we've done, plus christmas ornaments if they were available.
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Offline Honda Hansel

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #718 on: March 11, 2026, 06:46:13 AM »
had to repair pulled threads in the cam box hold down after i torqued the head on
I should have knowen better then this (Engine had been apart before by some window licking F&^%$ H#$@^)and the threads was damaged .I should have done this in the mill instead.MY problem LOL
Here is what i made for the 6 MM and 8 MM heli-coil drill and tap guide

YES I will cover it up

Honda Hansel

 
Honda Hansel
#1 1977 CB750 K7 #2 1981CX500C
#3 1982 CX500TC TURBO #4 2009 KAWASAKI KLX250
#5 2017 YAMAHA 1200 TENERE
#6 2020 KAWASAKI Z900 RS SE
#7 1978 HondaCB750F project bike
#8 1978 Honda CB550K
#9 1968 Kawasaki A1SS 250 cc Two stroke smoker

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #719 on: March 11, 2026, 06:53:48 AM »
had to repair pulled threads in the cam box hold down after i torqued the head on
I should have knowen better then this (Engine had been apart before by some window licking F&^%$ H#$@^)and the threads was damaged .I should have done this in the mill instead.MY problem LOL
Here is what i made for the 6 MM and 8 MM heli-coil drill and tap guide

YES I will cover it up

Honda Hansel

I like it! Very clever.

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #720 on: March 14, 2026, 06:48:41 AM »
True

Offline grcamna2

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Re: Cool Tools.
« Reply #721 on: March 14, 2026, 08:58:52 AM »
75' CB400F/'bunch o' parts'
  I love the small ones too !
Do your BEST...nobody can take that away from you.