Throw away society - even with engineers

Started by Littlelegs, Mar 14, 2024, 05:54 PM

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Calum

Where in W Yorks are you? I have a small machine shop in Halifax, all I do is repair old stuff... I hate waste!

NoBeardNoTopKnot

#16
Quote from: GlenAnderson on Mar 14, 2024, 08:02 PMI would think that a competent machinist, doing your job for the first time (so factoring in a bit of head scratching that you wouldn't need to do next time) is going to be using up to an hour of their day. For a mate, or a regular customer, I can see them doing it. For some random stranger walking in? Not a chance.

I don't understand the root of this thread.  I'm pleased others see the reality too. Unusual in an LR forum.

A business (not to be confused with a hobby) would have to put a one-off job like that out at £150, with VAT.. eg better part of £200, maybe £300, and still rather not do it. It's not surprising they weren't happy to see this work.

No business wants a potential regular customer like this, why inflict this injury? More profitable to pay 'em £50 to go away.

Er, yes, ex-factory it's a £20 item. If customers like that threaten friends... as well... there's reason to set the dogs on 'em.

TimV

Simple job to do on a lathe but I see there is no centre on the end of that armature shaft, so holding it accurately won't be easy.

It also looks like the bearing surface is worn on the pictured end, which won't be easy to correct.

autorover1

Last time I refurbed a starter motor I found a NOS rotor ( Ex MoD ) so was able to just replace with new bushes and brushes as the field coils were OK

Littlelegs

Quote from: Calum on Mar 15, 2024, 12:23 AMWhere in W Yorks are you? I have a small machine shop in Halifax, all I do is repair old stuff... I hate waste!

I'm not far from Fax, just up the road near Morley. If you'd like to pm me the shop address I'll happily call down at some point so you can take a look and see if it's doable/worthwhile. That'd be fantastic  :cheers-man
1963 Series 2a 88 petrol

Littlelegs

Quote from: NoBeardNoTopKnot on Mar 15, 2024, 01:36 PM
Quote from: GlenAnderson on Mar 14, 2024, 08:02 PMI would think that a competent machinist, doing your job for the first time (so factoring in a bit of head scratching that you wouldn't need to do next time) is going to be using up to an hour of their day. For a mate, or a regular customer, I can see them doing it. For some random stranger walking in? Not a chance.

I don't understand the root of this thread.  I'm pleased others see the reality too. Unusual in an LR forum.

A business (not to be confused with a hobby) would have to put a one-off job like that out at £150, with VAT.. eg better part of £200, maybe £300, and still rather not do it. It's not surprising they weren't happy to see this work.

No business wants a potential regular customer like this, why inflict this injury? More profitable to pay 'em £50 to go away.

Er, yes, ex-factory it's a £20 item. If customers like that threaten friends... as well... there's reason to set the dogs on 'em.


I wasn't expecting it doing for nothing as I accept businesses are there to make a living, but just don't like to see something that could be reused thrown on the scrap heap for the sake of a relatively simple repair (if you have the equipment).

I also like to support local businesses and would have accepted that skimming may not be a long term solution, so no complaints from me if it subsequently failed. If as you say businesses don't want customers like me (or my friends) so be it, I'll go buy new replacements.

However, if we all did that and nobody sought repairs from these businesses they'd then have no business.
1963 Series 2a 88 petrol

w3526602

Hi,was

Maybe I was lucky, my father (who left school at 12, with no qualifications) was foreman of the Tool Room, at Briggs Motor Bodies on Croydon Aerodrome. He was responsible for making the tooling for car door locks for Ford Cars. His attitude was to tell the designers NOT to design the tools ... just give him a drawing of the part, and HE would design the tool (which they could then draw). He said it was easier working in meta l, than brooding over the drawing board.

Later, we worked for METAL PROPELLORS (who made the props for the R101 airship, and never looked back) For those that are not familiar with airships, the R101 crashed and burned (RED flames) on its maiden flight. The highly inflatable gas should have burned BLUE. Read all about it in Nevil Schute's autobiography "TOUCH WOOD". A real life ripping yarn. NS was involved in building the R100, which flew to America, Google might find something.

Metal Propellors specialised of fabricating stainless steel petro-chemical columns. Dad's bungalow was adorned with stainless steel gutters and drain pipes, gate hinges, door knob, and a boot scraper. He even made a stainless exhaust for his 1940s Austin 8. As the Stores had no stock of the diameter pipe he needed, he made a pipe (like a cardboard bog-role tube) by rolling stainless strip and seam welding, then bending the resulting pipe to shape. His car used to "hiss" down the road ... he had designed and built the silencer too.

While working in an old stable, just after WW2, he was asked to quote for making a metal box and a double ended stud. He quoted £5 for the box, and one shilling and sixpence, for the stud. The customer knocked him down to a shilling for the stud ... then ordered 500 of each. Dad's quote had include the price of the press tool, to make one box, so he tried to alter his quote, but the customer wouldn't discuss any other changes. Dad didn't argue, and very happily banged out 500 boxes, taking only a few seconds each. ££££££££ ... :cheers-man.

602   


Exile

#22
Quote from: Calum on Mar 15, 2024, 12:23 AMWhere in W Yorks are you? I have a small machine shop in Halifax, all I do is repair old stuff... I hate waste!

This makes the point in my earlier post.

Don't go to high-overhead workshops, but find the person who will do it.

Even though I suspect that Calum is not the "old boy" of myth :)), some people do keep working for fun after retirement. To keep feeling valued, to keep the brain active, or to keep them off golf courses or dying of boredom. They are of an age with no children to support, or mortgage to pay.

If they've been doing it for 50 years, there is little head scratching, and the thing is dismantled in a few minutes with the tools he's been using for decades.


My starter refurb cost just over £70, including a new solenoid on the side

Most of its future life will be spent doing precious little, hanging about on the side of the engine - and only being used for starting, so tbh, I am not lying in bed worrying that it will pack up any time soon...

Each to their own of course, and I hope this forum has provided you with a solution, Littlelegs.

Calum

Unfortunately I am along way off retirement!!

w3526602

Hi,

Did somebody ask the size of the box that my father had to make a press tool for? I think everybody concerned died a long time ago, so I can't ask, but I got the impression that it was only a few inches in area, and not very deep. The cost (£5) was in making the press tool, after which, making each box was negligible. Remember that wages were very low in those days.

At one time, Dad (who was self employed) was making £17 a week. Mum was worried about the lack of security, so found him a normal job .... at £3 a week.

The next bit concerns Barbara's and my history, but I won't be offended if you skip it.

I was demobbed from the RAF in 1967, lived and worked in Croydon till the property boom in the early 1970s. We sold that house, at 100-plus percent profit, moved to Swansea, where Barbara was born just before the Swansea Blitz, and bought a house for cash, in Penygroes, near Ammanford. It was the best house we ever owned, but not the best neighbours.

We caused offence by fencing the rear garden, to keep our Malaysian mongrel in. The man next door was upset about his young daughter decimating our pear tree and scattering the branches over our lawn. Her father told us to go back where we came from ....

Hmmm! My grandfather was born in Mumbles, in Swansea Bay.  Barbara is a direct descendent of Thomas Levi, who started the Methodist movement in South Wales ... lots of grave stones, in the Swansea Valley, bearing the name Levi. Both Barbara and Sara (our daughter) are able to converse in Welsh. Barbara took Welsh to A-level, but only achieved a (second) pass at O-level.

OT. During an evening at a friend's house, she was introduced, to somebody on the telephone, as a friend from France (She does have A-level French). All went swimmingly, until the friend asked "Why are you speaking French with a Welsh accent?" Barbara denies that she has a Welsh accent.

Such fun!

602

w3526602

Hi,

Probably OT, but my father was  born in Stockton on Tees, but walked down to London in the late 1920s.

In the 1980s he heard himself talking on a tape recorder, and was aghast.

"I sound like Harvey Smith!" he moaned. (HS was a famous Show Jumper, often on TV).

602

Betsy1969

It's good to know there are people around like Callum who still have the skills , tools and will to do these type of jobs.

The hard part of course is finding these people around the country. Maybe there should be some sort of list collated over time by club members / forum viewers ( with the relevant permissions / agreement from the little mesters concerned ) which could be stored on the website as a reference for others to use .

Regards Andy

simonbav

", and bought a house for cash, in Penygroes, near Ammanford. It was the best house we ever owned, but not the best neighbours."

I lived in Gorslas in 1998, had friends in Penygroes and drove a bus load of service users to Ammanford daily. Did you know Don Jones who ran the petrol station in Gorslas? He went to school with Adam and for a 5' Welshman, drove the largest artic recovery truck I'd seen. Full of the ingenuity of someone who'd been around mechanisms all his life.
1960 88" 2286 petrol truck cab
1971 109" 2286 diesel station wagon