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#1
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New work shop...
Well I'm moved in, and ready to start back on the 782. I love my new place. Still need a few tools, band saw, plasma, and a soada blast coverter for my blaster. Need better lights, and to sheet metal my workbench. But all in all i love it.
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#2
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Very nice!
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1966__122 Cub Cadet. Owner: Calvin, 6 yrs old Dad: Craig |
#3
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Looks like a great work area
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-Ryan
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#4
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Looks good, now get to work.
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2264 with 54 GT deck 1641 AKA Black Jack with a 402-E Haban Sickle bar mower JD317 dump truck BX2670 with FEL |
#5
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drool. nice shop !!!!!
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105(sold)782x3 &124(sold) . Lawn sweeper yard cart. Homemade 3 point hitch narrow frame sleeve hitch spring assist ih snowplows . Rear weight bracket and suitcase weights.Lots of extra parts 😀. |
#6
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Nothing like a nice, clean, new shop. Looks good.
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#7
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That looks great, I can imagine some great projects completed in there, congrats!
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Paul F Infantry Veteran Original...100/123/147 custom...149 FEL...782D...1282...1864...2182G |
#8
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Looks to clean. I would be afraid to work on anything in there. By the looks of the floor treatment I wonder if I would have to take my shoes off to enter.
I guess I'm also guilty of the carpet treatment. I have a piece in front of my bench to stand on when I'm working on something for long periods at a time. Sure beats standing on concrete.
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1450 w/ 44gt deck, 1572 w/ 50C deck, 450 snowblower. |
#9
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Looks great!
Do yourself a favor, put wheels on that sand blast cabinet and wheel it outside when you use it. You are gonna need the SUN shining in through the glass to see what you are doing, that is unless you like fumbling around in the dark by feel. The little fluorescent lamp inside will last maybe 15 minutes and will be absolutely worthless after that to see anything by. I hope you sealed all the seams up GOOD when you assembled it. They leak like a sieve and will shore turn that nice clean shop into a mess in a hurry, even with a vac hooked up to it. And oh, by the way, lay in a good supply of those plastic window liners , yer gonna need 'em..... Also, a big shaker carton of talcum/foot/baby powder so you can get the gloves off and on. put some kind permanent threaded type connections on the hose inside the cabinet to the nozzle assly or maybe double clamp it, it likes to blow off every now and then. I have the exact same cabinet and I am to the point of dreading having to use it once the weather warms up. Have Fun!! |
#10
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Looks rest. Nice shop! I agree get some wheels for your blaster and the plastic window liners. We use the window liners at work . It's nice to just change them instead to ruining your window.
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Brian April 1979 1200 Quietline 44A deck 1988 1211 customized into a 1288 with a K301AQS 38C deck and a 1864 54” deck . Snow blades 42" and 54" . Brinly disk, brinly plow a cultivator and a $5 brinly yard rake! |
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Cub Cadet is a premium line of outdoor power equipment, established in 1961 as part of International Harvester. During the 1960s, IH initiated an entirely new line of lawn and garden equipment aimed at the owners rural homes with large yards and private gardens. There were a wide variety of Cub Cadet branded and after-market attachments available; including mowers, blades, snow blowers, front loaders, plows, carts, etc. Cub Cadet advertising at that time harped on their thorough testing by "boys - acknowledged by many as the world's worst destructive force!". Cub Cadets became known for their dependability and rugged construction.
MTD Products, Inc. of Cleveland, Ohio purchased the Cub Cadet brand from International Harvester in 1981. Cub Cadet was held as a wholly owned subsidiary for many years following this acquisition, which allowed them to operate independently. Recently, MTD has taken a more aggressive role and integrated Cub Cadet into its other lines of power equipment.
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