Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,024
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but
I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!

Bill
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Bill" wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )


You don't recycle where you live?

  #3   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,375
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

In article , "Lobby Dosser" wrote:
"Bill" wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )


You don't recycle where you live?

Scrap steel brings about $225/ton, or around eleven cents a pound. He'd most
likely spend more on gasoline taking to a recycler than he'd get back in scrap
value.
  #4   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 144
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

In article
"Lobby Dosser" writes:
"Bill" wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )


You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.

--
Drew Lawson | Though it's just a memory,
| some memories last forever
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,134
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On Apr 5, 7:53*am, "dadiOH" wrote:
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. *I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! *; )


Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. *Like dead cats *

....or live ones!


Ron


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,375
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

In article , RonB wrote:
On Apr 5, 7:53=A0am, "dadiOH" wrote:
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. =A0I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! =A0; )


Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. =A0Like dead cats =A0

....or live ones!


Of course. Why do you think they call it a CATapult??
  #7   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 54
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On Apr 5, 5:53*am, "dadiOH" wrote:
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. *I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! *; )


Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. *Like dead cats *


What a waste! Don't you know that dead cats make great push sticks.

Luigi
who squirrelled away a couple of garage door springs in his garage for
20 years (but not on the door) until he gave them to a locals sculptor
last year.
  #8   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 511
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 4/5/2011 7:10 AM, Doug Miller wrote:
In , "Lobby wrote:
wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )


You don't recycle where you live?

Scrap steel brings about $225/ton, or around eleven cents a pound. He'd most
likely spend more on gasoline taking to a recycler than he'd get back in scrap
value.



Come on now. No fighting to be first in line to buy it!!!
New one's are going for upwards of $60. This one's already been cut in
two for easier storage! Serious offers only (please).

Bill
  #9   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 247
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

GEEESH! Talk to the solar PV people, especially if you have the mechanism.
Somebody will want to build a solar tracker from that one.

-----------------------

"Drew Lawson" wrote in message ...
I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.

--
Drew Lawson | Though it's just a memory,
| some memories last forever

  #11   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 144
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

In article
"dadiOH" writes:
Drew Lawson wrote:

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


If you lived in central Florida you could just put it out by the street and
someone would steal it within a couple of hours. I get rid of all sorts of
stuff that way, gotta drag an old fiberglass jon boat that someone left on
my property down there pretty soon.


That's how I get rid of lots of semi-useless stuff, but in the
pick-up sense rather than stealing. Our house is on a common
cut-through-the-neighborhoods path, so things with a "free" sign
don't last long. (I have an extra string trimmer I need to put
out. Any mechanic could probably make it run, but I'm no mechanic.)

We aren't in a wealthy area, but definitely a "not hurting" part
of town, so some people seem to make intentional shopping trips
around trash day. That's especially true in better weather.


--
Drew Lawson | "But the senator, while insisting he was not
| intoxicated, could not explain his nudity."
  #12   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 304
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

dadiOH wrote:
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left
over from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at
first, but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood
cutter? If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!



Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats


that begs the question: why won't they take dead cats? i put dead pack rats
in my trash can (not the recycling one though).

(or not so dead, as my wife found out one night as she was making the late
night deposit, which was the last time she ever did so)


  #13   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Doug Miller" wrote in message
...
In article , "Lobby Dosser"
wrote:
"Bill" wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )


You don't recycle where you live?

Scrap steel brings about $225/ton, or around eleven cents a pound. He'd
most
likely spend more on gasoline taking to a recycler than he'd get back in
scrap
value.



Out here we can take it to the curb. Reminding me that tonight's the night
....

  #14   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Drew Lawson" wrote in message
...
In article
"Lobby Dosser" writes:
"Bill" wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )


You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


Where I live (Portland, or area), if it's legal (your pipe would be) and
fits in the bin it's good to go. If it can't fit in the bin you can take it
to the recycler or pay $35 for a pu load at the dump. Our dump won't take
fluorescent bulbs or paint; they have to go to a special central recycling
center.

  #15   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Drew Lawson" wrote in message
...
In article
"dadiOH" writes:
Drew Lawson wrote:

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


If you lived in central Florida you could just put it out by the street
and
someone would steal it within a couple of hours. I get rid of all sorts
of
stuff that way, gotta drag an old fiberglass jon boat that someone left on
my property down there pretty soon.


That's how I get rid of lots of semi-useless stuff, but in the
pick-up sense rather than stealing. Our house is on a common
cut-through-the-neighborhoods path, so things with a "free" sign
don't last long. (I have an extra string trimmer I need to put
out. Any mechanic could probably make it run, but I'm no mechanic.)


Reminds me, got a couple junker lawnmowers need to go to the curb with a
sign ...



  #16   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"dadiOH" wrote in message
.com...
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!



Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats


That's what the beefy plastic bags are made for ...

  #17   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,581
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 21:05:23 -0700, "Lobby Dosser"
wrote:

"Drew Lawson" wrote in message
...
In article
"Lobby Dosser" writes:
"Bill" wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


Where I live (Portland, or area), if it's legal (your pipe would be) and
fits in the bin it's good to go. If it can't fit in the bin you can take it
to the recycler or pay $35 for a pu load at the dump. Our dump won't take
fluorescent bulbs or paint; they have to go to a special central recycling
center.


Fluor bulb cost: $2 each.
Fluor bulb recycling area: Portland only, nowhere else in Oregon.
Fluor bulb recycling cost: ONLY $4, delivered to the recycler.

"Uckfay atthay itshay!" sez I. I recycle everything else, though, and
when they make it convenient to recycle fluor tubes, I'll do those.
As it is, it's a tax on eco idiots by gov't approved scammers.

--
You do not need a parachute to skydive.
You only need a parachute to skydive twice.
  #18   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,024
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

Lobby Dosser wrote:
"dadiOH" wrote in message
.com...
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!



Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats


That's what the beefy plastic bags are made for ...


For disguising the cats or as freezer bags? What about the tail? ; )
  #19   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 21:05:23 -0700, "Lobby Dosser"
wrote:

"Drew Lawson" wrote in message
...
In article
"Lobby Dosser" writes:
"Bill" wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


Where I live (Portland, or area), if it's legal (your pipe would be) and
fits in the bin it's good to go. If it can't fit in the bin you can take
it
to the recycler or pay $35 for a pu load at the dump. Our dump won't take
fluorescent bulbs or paint; they have to go to a special central recycling
center.


Fluor bulb cost: $2 each.
Fluor bulb recycling area: Portland only, nowhere else in Oregon.


Did not know that. How about the big box stores down there, do they take
them? The electronic and office supply places up here all take printer ink
cartridges and various batteries. I think they also recycle laser printer
cartridges.

A BTW for pet owners, don't let them get at any of those button batteries
(infants and children too, I guess)! If swallowed, the damn things light off
and burn holes!

  #20   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Lobby Dosser wrote:
"dadiOH" wrote in message
.com...
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats


That's what the beefy plastic bags are made for ...


For disguising the cats or as freezer bags? What about the tail? ; )


Tie it to a back leg ...



  #21   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 307
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

If you have scrap tires put them in the front yard with a $50.00 'for
sale' sign on them and when it gets dark someone will steal them! Worked
twice for me!

JR


http://community.webtv.net/awoodbutc...oodWorkingPage




  #22   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,733
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 4/5/2011 7:45 AM, Drew Lawson wrote:
In
"Lobby writes:
wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )


You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


put it in the iron pile?

Throw it in a ditch?

cut it up and put it in your trash?

dig a deeper hole?



--
Steve Barker
remove the "not" from my address to email
  #23   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,733
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 4/5/2011 8:59 AM, Doug Miller wrote:
In , wrote:
On Apr 5, 7:53=A0am, wrote:
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. =A0I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! =A0; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!

Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. =A0Like dead cats =A0

....or live ones!


Of course. Why do you think they call it a CATapult??


Does that make this a squirrelapult?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kBb7KReY6Eg


--
Steve Barker
remove the "not" from my address to email
  #24   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,733
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 4/5/2011 11:56 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 21:05:23 -0700, "Lobby
wrote:

"Drew wrote in message
...
In
"Lobby writes:
wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


Where I live (Portland, or area), if it's legal (your pipe would be) and
fits in the bin it's good to go. If it can't fit in the bin you can take it
to the recycler or pay $35 for a pu load at the dump. Our dump won't take
fluorescent bulbs or paint; they have to go to a special central recycling
center.


Fluor bulb cost: $2 each.
Fluor bulb recycling area: Portland only, nowhere else in Oregon.
Fluor bulb recycling cost: ONLY $4, delivered to the recycler.

"Uckfay atthay itshay!" sez I. I recycle everything else, though, and
when they make it convenient to recycle fluor tubes, I'll do those.
As it is, it's a tax on eco idiots by gov't approved scammers.

--
You do not need a parachute to skydive.
You only need a parachute to skydive twice.


I just javelin them sonabitches into the dumpster and they disappear.

--
Steve Barker
remove the "not" from my address to email
  #25   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,733
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 4/6/2011 3:51 AM, Jerry - OHIO wrote:
If you have scrap tires put them in the front yard with a $50.00 'for
sale' sign on them and when it gets dark someone will steal them! Worked
twice for me!

JR


http://community.webtv.net/awoodbutc...oodWorkingPage





had a friend got rid of a push mower that way. Took his new one,
started mowing, then put the old one right where he left off, and it was
gone the next morning.

--
Steve Barker
remove the "not" from my address to email


  #26   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,581
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On Wed, 06 Apr 2011 01:29:15 -0400, Bill wrote:

Lobby Dosser wrote:
"dadiOH" wrote in message
.com...
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats


That's what the beefy plastic bags are made for ...


For disguising the cats or as freezer bags? What about the tail? ; )


There's an idea. Triplebag the dead cats in your freezer, putting
them out only the night before pickup so they don't give themselves
away by smelling up the can.

If only we had more Asian restaurants in town...

--
Some people are like Slinkies ... not really good for
anything, but you can't help smiling when you see one
tumble down the stairs.
  #27   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,581
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On Wed, 06 Apr 2011 08:45:32 -0500, Steve Barker
wrote:

On 4/5/2011 7:45 AM, Drew Lawson wrote:
In
"Lobby writes:
wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


put it in the iron pile?

Throw it in a ditch?

cut it up and put it in your trash?

dig a deeper hole?


We have guys here in town who advertise that they collect all old
scrap metal, which they sell to the metal recycler. Free pickup.
See your local newspaper classified ads.

Or you could make something out of it. Retask these things, guys.

--
Some people are like Slinkies ... not really good for
anything, but you can't help smiling when you see one
tumble down the stairs.
  #28   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,024
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 06 Apr 2011 01:29:15 -0400, wrote:

Lobby Dosser wrote:
wrote in message
.com...
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats

That's what the beefy plastic bags are made for ...


For disguising the cats or as freezer bags? What about the tail? ; )


There's an idea. Triplebag the dead cats in your freezer, putting
them out only the night before pickup so they don't give themselves
away by smelling up the can.


LOL - How many do you have???


If only we had more Asian restaurants in town...

--
Some people are like Slinkies ... not really good for
anything, but you can't help smiling when you see one
tumble down the stairs.


  #29   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 06 Apr 2011 08:45:32 -0500, Steve Barker
wrote:

On 4/5/2011 7:45 AM, Drew Lawson wrote:
In
"Lobby writes:
wrote in message
...
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from
an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but I
retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

You don't recycle where you live?


I recycle where I live, but I've never lived anywhere that the
recycling pickup/dropoff would take steel other than food cans.

I'm digging out a 6' steel pole ('70s style satellite dish post)
in the back yard, and I have no idea what I'll do with it when it
is out of the ground.


put it in the iron pile?

Throw it in a ditch?

cut it up and put it in your trash?

dig a deeper hole?


We have guys here in town who advertise that they collect all old
scrap metal, which they sell to the metal recycler. Free pickup.
See your local newspaper classified ads.


Guys that do that in the Portland area also. Problem is they don't ask
before they remove the guard rails and stop signs ....

  #30   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 06 Apr 2011 01:29:15 -0400, Bill wrote:

Lobby Dosser wrote:
"dadiOH" wrote in message
.com...
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats

That's what the beefy plastic bags are made for ...


For disguising the cats or as freezer bags? What about the tail? ; )


There's an idea. Triplebag the dead cats in your freezer, putting
them out only the night before pickup so they don't give themselves
away by smelling up the can.

If only we had more Asian restaurants in town...


Chinese restaurant in town near where I was stationed in England got shut
down for that and serving cat Food (the canned kind). Most of us ate at the
Indian places, but I was always suspicious of the teensy tiny drumsticks in
the Tandoori Chicken ...



  #31   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 06 Apr 2011 01:29:15 -0400, wrote:

Lobby Dosser wrote:
wrote in message
.com...
Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left
over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first,
but I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood
cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!


Maybe you could make some sort of catapult and use it for disposing of
things the trash men won't take. Like dead cats

That's what the beefy plastic bags are made for ...

For disguising the cats or as freezer bags? What about the tail? ; )


There's an idea. Triplebag the dead cats in your freezer, putting
them out only the night before pickup so they don't give themselves
away by smelling up the can.


LOL - How many do you have???


I've got three. All of them bigger than the dog.

  #32   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Steve Barker" wrote in message
...
On 4/6/2011 3:51 AM, Jerry - OHIO wrote:
If you have scrap tires put them in the front yard with a $50.00 'for
sale' sign on them and when it gets dark someone will steal them! Worked
twice for me!

JR


http://community.webtv.net/awoodbutc...oodWorkingPage





had a friend got rid of a push mower that way. Took his new one, started
mowing, then put the old one right where he left off, and it was gone the
next morning.


LOL!!

  #33   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 287
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 2011-04-05 12:49:59 -0400, "dadiOH" said:

If you lived in central Florida you could just put it out by the street
and someone would steal it within a couple of hours. I get rid of all
sorts of stuff that way, gotta drag an old fiberglass jon boat that
someone left on my property down there pretty soon.


Things are tough all over -- today was trash day (we have recycling
pick-up every OTHER week) and I noticed a heavily-laden old Chevy
pickup truck cruising the cans on my street. Not the first time, either!

(N.B. I've got plenty of partcle board for disposable jigs from a
entertainment center somebody left on the street, too -- just not from
MY neighborhood. GRIN)

  #34   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 287
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 2011-04-06 00:05:23 -0400, "Lobby Dosser" said:

Our dump won't take fluorescent bulbs or paint; they have to go to a
special central recycling center.


If it's latex, all that's required here for trash pick up is that you
dump enough cat litter in the can that the paint's no longer liquid.

  #35   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 287
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On 2011-04-06 04:51:26 -0400, (Jerry - OHIO) said:

If you have scrap tires put them in the front yard with a $50.00 'for
sale' sign on them and when it gets dark someone will steal them! Worked
twice for me!


Thanks for the laugh!



  #36   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Steve" wrote in message
g.com...
On 2011-04-05 12:49:59 -0400, "dadiOH" said:

If you lived in central Florida you could just put it out by the street
and someone would steal it within a couple of hours. I get rid of all
sorts of stuff that way, gotta drag an old fiberglass jon boat that
someone left on my property down there pretty soon.


Things are tough all over -- today was trash day (we have recycling
pick-up every OTHER week) and I noticed a heavily-laden old Chevy pickup
truck cruising the cans on my street. Not the first time, either!

(N.B. I've got plenty of partcle board for disposable jigs from a
entertainment center somebody left on the street, too -- just not from MY
neighborhood. GRIN)



Toledo Ohio about late 1960s we'd get an "all you can drag to the curb day"
a few times a year. Folks would be out all night cruising neighborhoods with
a kid hanging out a window spotlighting the curb.

  #37   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 889
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

"Steve" wrote in message
g.com...
On 2011-04-06 00:05:23 -0400, "Lobby Dosser" said:

Our dump won't take fluorescent bulbs or paint; they have to go to a
special central recycling center.


If it's latex, all that's required here for trash pick up is that you dump
enough cat litter in the can that the paint's no longer liquid.



They apparently really Do something with the paint here.

  #38   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,123
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

On Apr 5, 12:25*am, Bill wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. *I placed it in the garbage, at first, but
I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! *; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!

Bill


Heat it with a torch and stretch it out. Make it into
small scribes, detail knives, etc. The only difference
between spring steel and tool steel is the temper
(purple vs. straw).

Need a whole lot of cheap miter clamps? Cut the thing
down the side with a slitting wheel. Sharpen the cut
ends so they'll bite into wood.
  #39   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,024
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

Father Haskell wrote:
On Apr 5, 12:25 am, wrote:
I just happen to have this 32" torsion spring with a 2" i.d. left over
from an obvious home repair. I placed it in the garbage, at first, but
I retrieved it--in case it may be valuable! ; )

Seriously, is it material suitable for making any sort of wood cutter?
If it is, I think I can get a lot of 'em out of the spring!

Bill


Heat it with a torch and stretch it out. Make it into
small scribes, detail knives, etc. The only difference
between spring steel and tool steel is the temper
(purple vs. straw).


That's the kind of encouragement (and information) I was after!
Thank you.

Bill
  #40   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 11,538
Default Salvaging a Garage door torsion-spring

Lobby Dosser wrote:


Toledo Ohio about late 1960s we'd get an "all you can drag to the
curb day" a few times a year. Folks would be out all night cruising
neighborhoods with a kid hanging out a window spotlighting the curb.


I do that in 2011. Here it's called "Heavy Trash" day (sometimes "Yard
Waste" day).

And I call my excursion "foraging."


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Garage Torsion Spring Repair - Chicago darryl Home Repair 4 March 6th 07 08:29 PM
Garage torsion spring Jack Home Repair 24 February 7th 07 07:10 PM
Garage door torsion spring replacement Phil Morgan Home Repair 4 May 30th 06 01:20 PM
Garage door torsion springs. Rich Home Repair 24 October 11th 04 11:40 AM
Why would a garage door torsion spring break & is two betterthan one? Bill Seurer Home Ownership 8 February 20th 04 12:12 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:03 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"