Thanks for satisfying my curiosity! I've been thinking about this method for a while. Yeah, maybe a braided brake cable? If that's soft stainless safety wire it will get fatigued and break.
@timelapselife.seanjree434 күн бұрын
The braided brake cable has been suggested a few times. Think I'll try that next. Thanks for the input.
@mikemm034 күн бұрын
First thing. That trimmer is garbage. I had one and could never get accurate cuts. Sold it and went back to my gas Husky
@timelapselife.seanjree434 күн бұрын
It's not the greatest trimmer, I'll admit. But it works fine for my smaller yard.
@JimmyCrackCorn-c3q4 күн бұрын
Try using brake cable from a bicycle it's about the same diameter as string
@joshharwell37975 күн бұрын
No. Metal fatigue break. Every time.
@timelapselife.seanjree435 күн бұрын
That's what it kept doing to me.
@ReadyUpGo5 күн бұрын
I can save you some time cuz I had the same idea. I installed a twisted length of stainless 16 gauge wire on each side of a Ryobi electric trimmer where the hard plastic blades attach. I was tired of breaking those blades anytime I hit a cement step or a rock. All went well for awhile. I too had taken the guard off in the interest of being able to observe the wire as the experiment progressed. It cut weeds and such like they were butter…and house paint and cedar siding and fencing and pretty much anything it touched but it lasted for a long time until it couldn’t take it anymore and broke, requiring a replacement effort just like the plastic blades plus I had to make the wire all twisty and such, but I hit a lot of hard surfaces first, by gum, so it was a general overall failure. Fortunately my wife found out what I had been doing when she saw how my boots had been shredded and took the trimmer away for a week to save me from hospital bills and being labeled the neighborhood idiot, so yeah, I’d recommend it if you’re a real man out there! Hail Yes! Get to it guys!
@leslietoth79695 күн бұрын
Moral of your story: get rid of trimmer, keep the wife 😅😅😅
@timelapselife.seanjree434 күн бұрын
I can't express how much I enjoyed reading your story! Sounded very much like my own. I am making a part 2.
@RollinMyOwn13 күн бұрын
My head hurts now...
@timelapselife.seanjree4313 күн бұрын
Take 2 aleve and wait for part 3! 😂
@KevinPhelann-gc1tu17 күн бұрын
That normal tapets play
@timelapselife.seanjree4317 күн бұрын
Usually a couple thousandths. That gap was a popsicle stick!
@HipaParts17 күн бұрын
Very informative go cart engine dismantling video. Thanks for sharing. I noticed that you posted some small engine repair videos and the tips you shared there are very helpful. I'm wondering whether you are up for a collaboration. I mean you are an experienced small engine DIY repairer and Hipa supplies parts for small engines and maybe we would work together to help more people in the community.
@timelapselife.seanjree4317 күн бұрын
Sounds like good fun. I do have another couple projects lined up that will require small engines and or parts. This go cart included. Feel free to contact me. [email protected]
@kentuckytrapper78019 күн бұрын
That motor hasn't run in years..
@timelapselife.seanjree4319 күн бұрын
It has sat for about 6 months from the time it blew until I took it apart. But yes, it ran last season. Rescued it from a barn before that.
@kristapedia20 күн бұрын
😅
@kristapediaАй бұрын
Hey I have one of those trucks! It just keeps on trucking 😂
@timelapselife.seanjree43Ай бұрын
Ford tough!
@kristapediaАй бұрын
Nice work 👏
@kalani1987Ай бұрын
I would let the filter and drain plug drain out at the same time. Usually more oil will come out once the filter is removed