Friday, September 16, 2011

sculpture progress

A wainwright original now an artifact on the wall.

The new:
Machined stainless hubs with included angle for spokes, and welded to rolled 1" stainless tube "tire." hubs get special end caps with welded shaft collars.

Personal Projects

This tank received a lot of love, cutting out the old channel, new fuel tap and filling hole, dents erased and profile narrowed.





Recent Work

I built something small and something big.

These are special brackets to mount the windmill speed control to the outside of the tower. A hydraulic motor that couples to the windmill bearing shaft slows the rotation by resistance of the hydraulic fluid.


This tower is 26 ft tall, welded construction, ready to be hot-dipped galvanized.






Monday, August 15, 2011

Working

This is model in progress for a local sculptor.. its brother is similar, try 20ft longer.
The piece pictured needed a little stretch so i chopped the top, bent up a new dome with slightly taller geometry and welded it back up.






Saturday, June 11, 2011

Nautical Lamps


Parts are coming together for a custom nautical style "explosion proof" lamp project. Consider something like this:
Matt's design is simpler, heavier and includes beautiful milk-colored hand blown glass. I spent this week in the machine shop making parts and here is a little progress.

silicon bronze welding on bulb socket holders:


detail for countersinking assembly screws:


result:
Matt and I put our heads together, and he came up with a unique metal spinning set-up on a Logan engine lathe.

The product:


PARTS!

The lamps will be incorporated with original sea-fairing hardware.


More progress coming next week, at the shop of Bobs Welding.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Motor build.

First legit go at it. I have a few skeletons in my closet as far as engine rebuilds go. but this one is for real..

sludge trap bad bad bad, crank needs reground. new pistons found at mid-ohio. new bores thanks to hutch.


this transmission was BAD. main bearings shot. shift forks did not budge. selector plate in rough shape. plunger pitted. the whole nine yards. good replacements found on the internet. sigh of relief.


more progress coming soon.

BACK AT BOBS.

I'm pleased to be (once again) working under the wing of the incomparable Matt Koestner at bob's welding. Years ago Matt took me in from the fog of art school and taught me how to weld, run a lathe, and a Bridgeport. gee thanks Matt!

Rush job for local sculptor: armature for wearable "junk mass"


An afternoon with the roller and mig gun. (four foot sphere in background)


two finished products on our end: armature with backpack 3 ft size sphere.



Thursday, February 24, 2011

The Ride.



This is a '67 T100C chopper built by the original owner in the late 60's early 70's. It was parked after the death of the owner, the son held onto it for a little while, then sold it to a dude in western MA. When I dragged it home the pistons were stuck, and the rear tire was flat, but with a little love and some help from the fish, I got the motor free and the tires filled.



I really love the spun aluminum oil tank and matching velocity stack, the bars were funny to me, and the front end seemed wrong at first, But now i'm digging the original stance. Unfortunatley the seat is just too wide for its own good, and really makes the bike look chunky when you walk up to it, but maybe some day i'll trim it down or outfit a classy replica.

This whole thing started in July, and I'm feeling about 50% done right now. as long as the lady's car runs and i have a job, I'll be jammin' in the summer time.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011


This is me in LA with a bro's bike. He had not ridden it in a while so i gave it a little charge, some air in the tires and some fresh gas and took it for a ride. Plenty of fun. I've never ridden grooved pavement, or anywhere in California for that matter so it was a real treat.

Thanks Owen!