Switched my walk-behind mower from winter to summer mode (from plow to mowing deck, and different tires), and servicing it. The blower for the bagging system now has a slightly shorter intake hose (as it's shared with the vacuum project I recently completed), so I needed to create a short angled extension for my deck so it could connect to it:
These are easier to "angle" than the blower output nozzle I made, because I don't need to fab up a bunch of strips to connect two rings together. Instead, I can make some more rings, then cut them at an angle, rotate one half 180 degrees and then weld it back together.
The extension is removable, because I have one home to do where I have to flip that black housing up to get it through a gate, and the extension prevents it from flipping all the way over.
I have to make a similar extension for the blower output, to change the angle of it, as the 7" hose can't bend sharply enough. Got started on it, will complete it tomorrow:
The ring-making tool I bought has definitely paid for itself. The only thing I've found is that if you make a ring by sneaking up on it (slowly adjusting it to make a tighter and tighter curve) until it's just right, if you then put in a new, flat piece of metal to make another ring, it will be much too tight, and then it's a hassle to bend it flat enough everywhere to get the right curve...
These are easier to "angle" than the blower output nozzle I made, because I don't need to fab up a bunch of strips to connect two rings together. Instead, I can make some more rings, then cut them at an angle, rotate one half 180 degrees and then weld it back together.
The extension is removable, because I have one home to do where I have to flip that black housing up to get it through a gate, and the extension prevents it from flipping all the way over.
I have to make a similar extension for the blower output, to change the angle of it, as the 7" hose can't bend sharply enough. Got started on it, will complete it tomorrow:
The ring-making tool I bought has definitely paid for itself. The only thing I've found is that if you make a ring by sneaking up on it (slowly adjusting it to make a tighter and tighter curve) until it's just right, if you then put in a new, flat piece of metal to make another ring, it will be much too tight, and then it's a hassle to bend it flat enough everywhere to get the right curve...