Eric Smith

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 15 posts - 91 through 105 (of 1,588 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: Would you? #252983

    Eric Smith
    Member

    True that fellas! The WRF would be a much better bike to ride, slimmer, lighter, much more power. The DRZ is old faithful and just starts when I hit the button. I do know of a few WRF’s with higher k’s on them so they can do it – not that I will be adding heaps of mileage anyway! Tough choice!

    I must admit, I like the challenge of punting the DRZ into places most people wouldn’t expect it to go, but it does make the more technical rides harder than they have to be (lack of clearance and heavy being the main issues).

    Not looking to trade in or upgrade in the near future. If I keep the DRZ it will stay in my shed for the foreseeable future. If I swap to the WRF, it would be a keeper as well. As much as I’d love a nice Sherco, it ain’t gonna happen anytime soon!

    in reply to: 3SixT video camera #252982

    Eric Smith
    Member
    Ollie wrote:
    That first Vid on the Pushy made me feel seasick :sick: :laugh: Not a bad outcome on the DRZ see how it goes on your helmet or chest plate.

    Thanks for that Ecks B)

    Ollie

    😆 Yeah, Youtube “fixed” the shakiness and I’m not convinced it is better to watch because of it! Still, when you mount to the bike the image will always shake. Keen to get it on a helmet and give it a go. Did you notice the cameo by Boony’s fan club in the DRZ clip? :laugh:

    in reply to: T B’s Shed #252649

    Eric Smith
    Member
    Trailboss wrote:
    ECKS-Man wrote:
    Great to see, bags of fun to be had in a 250f!

    Looking forward to seeing the build… can I ride it? :)

    Yes 100% you can ECKS, Orange in the near future suit you?

    TB

    Done! Thanks legend!

    in reply to: Quick singles out the back of home #252643

    Eric Smith
    Member

    Awesome! Will book you in for a single track special test eh mate! :D

    in reply to: T B’s Shed #252642

    Eric Smith
    Member

    Great to see, bags of fun to be had in a 250f!

    Looking forward to seeing the build… can I ride it? :)

    in reply to: Silly season, who is doing what over the break #252588

    Eric Smith
    Member

    Heading to Eden for Christmas to catch up with my parents and family, will be (most likely) taking the DRZ and my pushy. Love riding in that area! In the week of New Year will most likely be heading to Syd-knee to do a mates-rates job for a cousin. Otherwise I foresee a lot of beer, fishing and eating for the duration!

    All the best to you Old Bulls, you’re a top bunch of blokes and blokettes!

    in reply to: Longest Day 2013 #252511

    Eric Smith
    Member

    I can vouch for the wildlife out there. The roos are as thick as bloody grasshoppers. Did a job out between Hebel and Dirranbandi last week and had a meal at the Dirran pub. While we were driving back to our camp that night we hit at least 4 roos and we were not travelling particularly fast. Heaps of fairly small ones, but I don’t like hitting even small ones on a bike. Anyone riding out that way, be bloody careful!

    in reply to: The D6 Dozer Restoration #252472

    Eric Smith
    Member

    LeTourneau Drawn Scraper project

    Back in 1981, Darren’s father was building a dam on a property east of Wellington. He was using a Fiat Allis HD20 or HD21 bulldozer and a Letourneau drawn scraper. As he was finishing up the dam, the final drives on the dozer failed – while towing the loaded scraper. The scraper was parked where it stopped and the dozer taken away to be repaired. Bear in mind that the scraper bowl can’t be operated without power from the cable drive of the dozer – meaning it can’t be emptied.

    It turned out that the dozer was a write-off. In the resultant chaos, Barry never got back to the scraper. In the meantime, he changed dozers a few times and the scraper sat where it had been left.

    Time passed, trees grew in the bowl! It became a bit of a legend. Then last year Darren and I happened to be in the area and went to have a look:

    IMG_5134_zpsc5ba82c8.jpg

    Yep, that clump of trees is growing out of the bowl!

    IMG_5137_zpsdf885ff8.jpg

    IMG_5139_zps962196dd.jpg

    IMG_5140_zpsc0a2d01a.jpg

    IMG_5142_zpse013cd0c.jpg

    IMG_5145_zps5aaa4daf.jpg

    This scraper is (I think from memory) a 14-yard scraper and is best towed behind a D7 sized machine. The plan is to recover this scraper and hook it behind one of the boys’ D7’s which will have a cable control installed to run it. They have some upcoming work near Lightning Ridge sinking tanks (dams) up to about 10,000 yards. That’s a big hole in the ground!

    We are hoping to get there in the next few months, cut the trees out and get it ready to move. Unfortunately, it will require one of the machines there to hook up the cables and lift the bowl then move the back of the bowl forward to empty it. The tyres are all shot and are no longer available, but an alternative has been found from underground mining boggers. The alternative tyres are a larger diameter, so the wheels will have “hungry boards” installed so that it all fits.

    Once we get the trees out and hook up the dozer, we hope the cables will be strong enough that we can lift the bowl, empty it and drag the scraper on to a low loader, flat tyres and all. Then take it back to the workshop and start making it go again!

    in reply to: The D6 Dozer Restoration #252471

    Eric Smith
    Member
    Trailboss wrote:
    ECKS-Man wrote:
    the rookie wrote:
    ECKS this is awesome ! Just watched the video and she sounds like she is running smoother then most machines today.

    Should start a new thread just for this project! i know im not the only one excited too see how the old dozer turns out!

    Ok, will do that tomorrow when I have a computer. TB, can you maybe shuffle these posts into a new thread?

    She runs really nicely, unbelievable really! This thing is getting on for 50 years old! Hopefully I can get some pics and video once it gets back to the workshop. Progress will stop for a while as the boys have to clear out some tanks (dams) near Lighting Ridge in the next week or so, but I will post what I can.

    No worries ECKS, great project eh I have worked on a donkey start cable blade 6 ;)

    TB

    Thanks PTW for moving these posts and starting this thread! I’ll try to do it justice!

    Yes TB, great project!

    These blokes run cable blades because they do a lot of scrub clearing and when raking sticks you need the blade to move up and down quite quickly. Hydraulics, particularly on these older model Cat’s, are too slow. They also use a drawn scraper which is controlled by cables. The advantage of a scraper towed behind a bulldozer is that the bulldozer can tow a scraper with 7 – 20 yards of dirt up the batter of a dam (3:1) where a powered scraper can only manage grades of a few percent.

    I’ll post up in a few minutes with pictures of a scraper project which is coming up!

    in reply to: The D6 Dozer Restoration #252467

    Eric Smith
    Member
    the rookie wrote:
    ECKS this is awesome ! Just watched the video and she sounds like she is running smoother then most machines today.

    Should start a new thread just for this project! i know im not the only one excited too see how the old dozer turns out!

    Ok, will do that tomorrow when I have a computer. TB, can you maybe shuffle these posts into a new thread?

    She runs really nicely, unbelievable really! This thing is getting on for 50 years old! Hopefully I can get some pics and video once it gets back to the workshop. Progress will stop for a while as the boys have to clear out some tanks (dams) near Lighting Ridge in the next week or so, but I will post what I can.

    in reply to: teknik service #252456

    Eric Smith
    Member
    Teknik wrote:
    This wasn’t an OLD BULL but this is what dealing with the public is like for us.

    ……

    Nick, I hear ya. It isn’t just retail or manufacturing being hit either. I’m a surveyor and own my own business, which for 23 years has been dealing with the local council. Suddenly they decide to change staff, and what do you know, one of the new staff prefers another surveyor. Well, OK, fair enough I guess. Except that I’m the only surveyor in town. Oh, and I was not asked to quote on any jobs that were tendered. Nor was anyone, including the clown who got the work. Oh, and the guy who got the work is not even in the next town.. he’s located 120km away!

    So I complain to Council, I live here, should have the chance to quote, and if I miss out I’ll learn to sharpen my pencil. What’s more, every other local council has a local purchasing policy which gives preference to local suppliers, so I’m at a disadvantage in all other council areas as well as in my own area.

    Next thing I know I get a request for a quote… good, right? Well, maybe, given that I was asked to do the quote on a Monday, with the quote completed by Tuesday, work starting on Friday and completed in the next week. Don’t tell me this other surveyor wasn’t already lined up for the job… which I didn’t get. Incidentally, the job was to survey a road for design, getting levels done etc. The other surveyor is reported to have mounted his GPS to the ute and driven along the road – accuracy? What accuracy? My method was to have taken individual measurements (with checks) and guarantee each measurement to an accuracy of about 10mm for height. No good quoting if you quote to supply apples when the other guy quotes on providing horse shit. Compare apples to apples please.

    I’m so sick of chasing clients for money, especially given they know before they start how much they are going to be charged, and sign forms to say they’ll pay. I even had a client complain about my work the other day (first time ever) after we called to get her to pay the bill! Idiot woman will end up in court, losing, for the sake of a few hundred dollars.

    It is a shame you don’t know about clients like this poor excuse for a human you’ve dealt with before they walk in the door (or call/email as more often happens now). I wish you all the best with it, but I think this country is a dead duck. :(

    in reply to: The D6 Dozer Restoration #252269

    Eric Smith
    Member

    D6 8U bulldozer restoration project

    IMAG03811_zps6823b1bb.jpg

    Well, she’s a runner! Yesterday a small group of us gathered around to hear this old machine fire up for the first time in 20 years. I missed the very first firing, which was aborted when the revs climbed and climbed and climbed! They shut it down and worked out that the injector rack was seized, and that there were other problems in the governor box, which will be sorted out back at the workshop.

    Barry and Darren pulled the covers off the governor box and managed to get the injector rack free, then put the covers back on and tried again.

    IMAG03741_zps1a066ce6.jpg

    IMAG03761_zps84dcf97a.jpg

    The engine runs as sweetly as any engine you have ever seen! When you put your hand against it as it is running it almost feels alive! Sounds silly I know, but it is true!

    Next move is to re-attach the blade for transport, which will require a top up of the hydraulics – shame, since they will only be removed at the workshop to be replaced with a cable system. Then chain the ripper to the blade, load the lot on to a low loader and drop it off at the workshop. Then the fun will really start!

    It seems as though the thermostats are stuck, with some steam coming out of the front after a few minutes of running, but there is a new radiator waiting back at the workshop. The temperature gauge is not working, so will be replaced. It wasn’t charging the batteries, so maybe the regulator is cactus – time will tell.

    IMAG03811_zps6823b1bb.jpg

    IMAG03781_zps7a994c5a.jpg

    IMAG03791_zps69a18b76.jpg

    IMAG03771_zps904fa035.jpg

    IMAG03751_zps3e9b43b9.jpg

    So, one major step closer!

    Video of it running and even moving in to the C frame to re-attach the blade:

    th_VIDEO00271_zps5307a48c.jpg

    Edit: I have just now been sent a video of the machine running with the blade attached! They don’t muck around, these boys!

    in reply to: Its hard to ride with an erection #252226

    Eric Smith
    Member

    Dang, the secret’s out! I’ve wanted a Sherco small bore 4t for years. Looks like I’ll be able to find one second-hand soon, they used to be as rare as hens teeth!

    in reply to: The D6 Dozer Restoration #251796

    Eric Smith
    Member

    D6 8U bulldozer restoration project

    2013_11_17_01_zpsf015e92b.jpg

    2013_11_17_03_zps43ad8cd1.jpg

    2013_11_17_02_zps2d3b4330.jpg

    A mate of mine based at Yeoval runs Caterpillar D6 8U’s for a living, amongst others including a D7E, traxcavator, grader etc. He is a bit of a specialist in the old Caterpillars.

    This machine was originally being repaired for the owner who has since decided that it would be better if my mate bought it and did and earthworks with it that he needs, rather than try to drive it himself. Good decision!

    My mate’s father still operates these machines (over 50 years worth of experience!) and this is to be restored “as new” for him to use. He bought one of these brand new back in the day (1962 I believe) and has used them ever since.

    This one has had the gearbox rebuilt, the floor plates and bonnet replaced, the seat rebuilt and everything sorted out to the highest standard they can manage, to give his Dad a taste of the old days, a “brand new” D6 8U. At the moment it runs hydraulics, but it will be converted to cable blade once they get it back to the workshop.

    If you’re interested I will see if I can get more progress shots at it is prettied up.


    Eric Smith
    Member

    Ok you lot, we have managed to get things sorted and there is now an Accommodation Package available for this gig:

    TRBB-JJG2013-ACCOM_zps547e37c4.jpg

    But, if you decide not to use this package, there will be a courtesy bus from Wellington so that you can have a drink or two and still get home. How good is that?

    DrinkBeerGlassDrink.gif1ba1426b.gif

Viewing 15 posts - 91 through 105 (of 1,588 total)