I remember the day you chopped 3 feet off a girder from each end of the same piece of metal and ended up with one original size girder and the other 6 feet short. This was when you built the bridge over the stream. So watching the concrete measurement brought that memory back.
Howdy bill, haven’t seen ya in awhile. Busted hand, yikes! Hoping it heals up real fast for ya! Good to see your still plugging away over there👍keep up the good work!
Nice saw! Definitely want the water running when you cut. Use a chalk line. The guard can be rotated toward the front if need be.
I remember the day you chopped 3 feet off a girder from each end of the same piece of metal and ended up with one original size girder and the other 6 feet short. This was when you built the bridge over the stream. So watching the concrete measurement brought that memory back.
HAHAHA I remember that too....
Good call on the new saw. They are handy. Thx
you need the ryobi power cutter from homedepot for those packges
Howdy bill, haven’t seen ya in awhile. Busted hand, yikes! Hoping it heals up real fast for ya! Good to see your still plugging away over there👍keep up the good work!
Bill just broach the old key in the flywheel, and use a regular key.
Maybe Kevin should have let the concrete dry just a little longer before he used the power trowel.
Put a layer of self levelling compound on it to level it up
Been watching bill for many years. Everything I know about small engine repair and welding came from his videos!
Cool 😎
Bill from my building construction days in school the rule is 1/3 rd the slab thickness that’s what the teacher and the textbook said
If you would cut dry. Have the wind blowing away from your body.
return parts