Home Made Tools
Moderator: FORDification
- timmytim
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 11:47 pm
- Location: suburb of Birmingham Alabama
Home Made Tools
I would like to see pictures of any Home Made Tool you have made. Just want some ideas for some small projects to do..
buy'em dirty sale'em clean
get more money for the same
machine.....
My 1967 bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 09#p668209
My 1970 Bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 16&t=50726
- timmytim
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 11:47 pm
- Location: suburb of Birmingham Alabama
Re: Home Made Tools
Here is a couple I found on the net. I made a home made vac brake bleeder using a shop vac and a radiator overflow jug. It worked good but I dont have pics....
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
buy'em dirty sale'em clean
get more money for the same
machine.....
My 1967 bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 09#p668209
My 1970 Bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 16&t=50726
- sargentrs
- 100% FORDified!
- Posts: 9866
- Joined: Fri Jun 22, 2007 9:30 am
- Location: Georgia, Jasper
Re: Home Made Tools
I made this soda blaster to clean my carb. Works good. http://www.aircooledtech.com/tools-on-t ... a_blaster/
Randy
1970 F100 Sport Custom Limited LWB, 302cid, 3 on the tree. NO A/C, NO P/S, NO P/B. Currently in 1000 pcs while rebuilding. Project thread: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 22&t=59995 Plan: 351w, C4, LSD, pwr front disc, p/s, a/c, bucket seats, new interior and paint.
1987 F-150 XLT Lariat, 5.0/C6 auto.
1970 F100 Sport Custom Limited LWB, 302cid, 3 on the tree. NO A/C, NO P/S, NO P/B. Currently in 1000 pcs while rebuilding. Project thread: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 22&t=59995 Plan: 351w, C4, LSD, pwr front disc, p/s, a/c, bucket seats, new interior and paint.
1987 F-150 XLT Lariat, 5.0/C6 auto.
- averagef250
- 100% FORDified!
- Posts: 4387
- Joined: Fri Mar 17, 2006 12:58 am
- Location: Oregon, Beavercreek
Re: Home Made Tools
I've made quite a few tools, I'll have to dig around the shop. Recently I had the pure joy of helping a friend do some "upgrades" to his '06 Duramax. If someone asks you to help them with one of these things and you have the option to ram an ice pick through one of your testicles instead, go with the latter! The 12mm 12 pt turbo to up-pipe bolts on the Duramaxes are tightened to 1.365 billion lb/ft at the factory and cannot be accessed directly without removing the cab. We called in "Mr. ratchets" The friend of ours who single handedly supports snap-on through buying every model and every size of ratchet snap-on has ever made in dozen quantities. Mr. Ratchet works on Duramaxes for a living too, he hates them. Mr Ratchet, even with all his ratchets, even super ratchets with 2' handles and 1200 clicks per/rev or some such fanciness couldn't break them loose.
So, I built a cool cheater bar that has come in handy a few times now- It's just a piece of 3/4" steel bar a few feet long with one end mitered at a 45 and piece of 3/4" ID tube welded on at a 45. It let us hold the ratchet on the up-pipe bolts from on top the engine and get the cheater bar handle out through the wheel well to get enough leverage and throw to break them loose.
So, I built a cool cheater bar that has come in handy a few times now- It's just a piece of 3/4" steel bar a few feet long with one end mitered at a 45 and piece of 3/4" ID tube welded on at a 45. It let us hold the ratchet on the up-pipe bolts from on top the engine and get the cheater bar handle out through the wheel well to get enough leverage and throw to break them loose.
1970 F-250 4x4 original Willock swivel frame chassis '93 5.9 Cummins/Getrag/NP205/HP60/D70
- PhantomoftheBumpside
- Preferred User
- Posts: 332
- Joined: Thu Dec 29, 2011 9:59 pm
- Location: Seattle, WA
Re: Home Made Tools
Here is a sample of the ones that I have made over the years...
The biggest one of this group is my "Flange Tool"
Comes in handy for bending anything that needs to be bent. I cut it from a piece of 1" plate and notched and dual shield welded it to a hefty hunk of 1 1/4" round stock. It has been used to straighten everything from bent flanges on rail road cars, to bent flanges on trailer chassis I-Beams, heavy truck bumpers and the bent up leveling foot on a HEMTT recovery vehicle. On the HEMTT we had to bounce the truck on it about 2 dozen times to get the foot straight enough to lock in place in it's travel position. Considering the truck weighs something like 20 tons, I feel pretty good about the design of my flange tool and my welding, and it definitely beats ruining a pipe wrench.
The next one is my Heavy Duty "Lady Foot"
She works with larger stuff where I would be worry about breaking smaller bars. I made it years ago from 2 pieces of 1/2" plate, welded together, then welded to round stock and ground to shape, after which I case hardened it (flaming oil is fun). It also comes in handy removing larger seals when my Snap On puller doesn't work out. Since it is basically a little anvil on a handle, it also gets used on just about any beating job where I can get away with not using a chisel, drift or punch, so it saves wear on other tools as well as my hands.
The smallest one of this group is my "Brake Rod Straightener"
This one was made from a salvaged air brake rod, some nuts and a clevis to effectively straighten bent air brake rods without slipping off and breaking stuff... like me.
The biggest one of this group is my "Flange Tool"
Comes in handy for bending anything that needs to be bent. I cut it from a piece of 1" plate and notched and dual shield welded it to a hefty hunk of 1 1/4" round stock. It has been used to straighten everything from bent flanges on rail road cars, to bent flanges on trailer chassis I-Beams, heavy truck bumpers and the bent up leveling foot on a HEMTT recovery vehicle. On the HEMTT we had to bounce the truck on it about 2 dozen times to get the foot straight enough to lock in place in it's travel position. Considering the truck weighs something like 20 tons, I feel pretty good about the design of my flange tool and my welding, and it definitely beats ruining a pipe wrench.
The next one is my Heavy Duty "Lady Foot"
She works with larger stuff where I would be worry about breaking smaller bars. I made it years ago from 2 pieces of 1/2" plate, welded together, then welded to round stock and ground to shape, after which I case hardened it (flaming oil is fun). It also comes in handy removing larger seals when my Snap On puller doesn't work out. Since it is basically a little anvil on a handle, it also gets used on just about any beating job where I can get away with not using a chisel, drift or punch, so it saves wear on other tools as well as my hands.
The smallest one of this group is my "Brake Rod Straightener"
This one was made from a salvaged air brake rod, some nuts and a clevis to effectively straighten bent air brake rods without slipping off and breaking stuff... like me.
-- ROB --
The collective money pit details...
-On The Road-
1990 * 1FTEE14YZLHA83xxx ..- 138 E142 __ E 18 __ 3P
-Projects-
-Spares-
-Recently Departed-
1997 - 4M2DU55P9VUJ46xxx...- 112 4 22 _ _ 8 D4 U 1F
1997 - Dodge Caravan
1987 - Toyota Tercel Wagon FWD
1978 - Winnebago Brave (Dodge D800FC)
1970 - F10YRJ80xxx ..............- 131 3 F100 D _4 G 02
1968 - F25YRC99xxx .............- 131 E F253 B 81 G C8
1968 - F25YRD69xxx .............- 131 C F254 E 81 A 24
The collective money pit details...
-On The Road-
1990 * 1FTEE14YZLHA83xxx ..- 138 E142 __ E 18 __ 3P
-Projects-
-Spares-
-Recently Departed-
1997 - 4M2DU55P9VUJ46xxx...- 112 4 22 _ _ 8 D4 U 1F
1997 - Dodge Caravan
1987 - Toyota Tercel Wagon FWD
1978 - Winnebago Brave (Dodge D800FC)
1970 - F10YRJ80xxx ..............- 131 3 F100 D _4 G 02
1968 - F25YRC99xxx .............- 131 E F253 B 81 G C8
1968 - F25YRD69xxx .............- 131 C F254 E 81 A 24
-
- New Member
- Posts: 138
- Joined: Wed Apr 20, 2011 9:12 pm
Re: Home Made Tools
i just found a cool site for everyone who likes to make tools its homemadetools.net
- timmytim
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 11:47 pm
- Location: suburb of Birmingham Alabama
Re: Home Made Tools
smokey3215 wrote:i just found a cool site for everyone who likes to make tools its homemadetools.net
hEY smokey that is a real cool site
buy'em dirty sale'em clean
get more money for the same
machine.....
My 1967 bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 09#p668209
My 1970 Bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 16&t=50726
-
- Blue Oval Guru
- Posts: 1147
- Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2011 9:15 pm
- Location: Arkansas, Camden
Re: Home Made Tools
I made this transmission holding fixture, last weekend, to use while tearing down/rebuilding the 4R70W transmission that will be going in my '69 F100 Ranger.
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 92#p614152
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 92#p614152
Steve
1969 SWB F100 Ranger. 240-6, C-4, 9" N-case 31-spline Traction-Lok w/3.50 gears.
1968 Mustang. My high school car. Owned since 1982.
2003 Azure Blue Mustang Mach1.
1969 SWB F100 Ranger. 240-6, C-4, 9" N-case 31-spline Traction-Lok w/3.50 gears.
1968 Mustang. My high school car. Owned since 1982.
2003 Azure Blue Mustang Mach1.
- timmytim
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 11:47 pm
- Location: suburb of Birmingham Alabama
Re: Home Made Tools
That's the big trans like a c6 but with a overdrive? Those trans can get heavy...ultraranger wrote:I made this transmission holding fixture, last weekend, to use while tearing down/rebuilding the 4R70W transmission that will be going in my '69 F100 Ranger.
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 92#p614152
buy'em dirty sale'em clean
get more money for the same
machine.....
My 1967 bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 09#p668209
My 1970 Bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 16&t=50726
-
- Blue Oval Guru
- Posts: 1147
- Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2011 9:15 pm
- Location: Arkansas, Camden
Re: Home Made Tools
No. The E4OD/4R100 overdrive transmissions were developed from the older C-6's.timmytim wrote:That's the big trans like a c6 but with a overdrive? Those trans can get heavy...ultraranger wrote:I made this transmission holding fixture, last weekend, to use while tearing down/rebuilding the 4R70W transmission that will be going in my '69 F100 Ranger.
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 92#p614152
The 4R70W evolved from the AODE. The AODE evolved from the AOD and the AOD was developed from the C-4/FMX transmissions.
Last edited by ultraranger on Mon Jul 23, 2012 8:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Steve
1969 SWB F100 Ranger. 240-6, C-4, 9" N-case 31-spline Traction-Lok w/3.50 gears.
1968 Mustang. My high school car. Owned since 1982.
2003 Azure Blue Mustang Mach1.
1969 SWB F100 Ranger. 240-6, C-4, 9" N-case 31-spline Traction-Lok w/3.50 gears.
1968 Mustang. My high school car. Owned since 1982.
2003 Azure Blue Mustang Mach1.
- timmytim
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 11:47 pm
- Location: suburb of Birmingham Alabama
Re: Home Made Tools
No. The E4OD/4R100 overdrive transmissions were developed from the older C-6's.
The 4R70W evolved from the AODE. The AODE evolved from the AOD and the AOD was devolped from the C-4/FMX transmissions.[/quote]
Hey thanks for the info....This is off subject but its electronic so you having to carry the computer from donor car over to ure pickup? I have a straight 6 that one day plan to add the aod. it should be easy swap cause ford small blocks have same bolt pattern as 240 straight six. i just got to find the flywheel and converter that will work with set up.
The 4R70W evolved from the AODE. The AODE evolved from the AOD and the AOD was devolped from the C-4/FMX transmissions.[/quote]
Hey thanks for the info....This is off subject but its electronic so you having to carry the computer from donor car over to ure pickup? I have a straight 6 that one day plan to add the aod. it should be easy swap cause ford small blocks have same bolt pattern as 240 straight six. i just got to find the flywheel and converter that will work with set up.
buy'em dirty sale'em clean
get more money for the same
machine.....
My 1967 bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 09#p668209
My 1970 Bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 16&t=50726
-
- Blue Oval Guru
- Posts: 1147
- Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2011 9:15 pm
- Location: Arkansas, Camden
Re: Home Made Tools
Hey thanks for the info....This is off subject but its electronic so you having to carry the computer from donor car over to ure pickup? I have a straight 6 that one day plan to add the aod. it should be easy swap cause ford small blocks have same bolt pattern as 240 straight six. i just got to find the flywheel and converter that will work with set up.[/quote]timmytim wrote:No. The E4OD/4R100 overdrive transmissions were developed from the older C-6's.
The 4R70W evolved from the AODE. The AODE evolved from the AOD and the AOD was devolped from the C-4/FMX transmissions.
No sir. I have an H.O. 5.0L fuel injected engine, I pulled from a totalled out '90 Mustang GT, that will eventually replace my carbed inline 240-6.
I have an A9P EEC-IV engine processor (from a '92 5.0L Mustang) that's designed for an engine that had an automatic (AOD) behind it, (the A9L EEC-IV engine processor was designed for 5.0L engines with a standard transmission).
The EEC-IV, itself, has no control over the transmission. The PCM (powertrain Control Module) for transmission control wasn't integrated into the ECM (Engine Control Module) [in the Mustangs], unitl 1994 when the 5.0L engines in the '94/'95 Mustangs were being coupled to the AODE's.
To control the shifting of the 4R70W, I have a stand-alone, programmable, Optishift shift unit from Baumann Electronic Controls. I can tailor the shift points (up or down) as well as manipulate the transmission's line pressures with the stand-alone unit. I can also set the controller to operate under the stock, factory shift settings.
The company name recently changed to, "U.S. Shift.com" & the controller name was changed to, "Quick 1," but this is the same exact shift controller I have. It just has a a different face plate on it.
1. http://www.usshift.com/index.shtml
2. http://www.becontrols.com/techguide.htm
Steve
1969 SWB F100 Ranger. 240-6, C-4, 9" N-case 31-spline Traction-Lok w/3.50 gears.
1968 Mustang. My high school car. Owned since 1982.
2003 Azure Blue Mustang Mach1.
1969 SWB F100 Ranger. 240-6, C-4, 9" N-case 31-spline Traction-Lok w/3.50 gears.
1968 Mustang. My high school car. Owned since 1982.
2003 Azure Blue Mustang Mach1.
- Nitekruizer
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 545
- Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2011 1:43 pm
- Location: Manitoba, Canada
Re: Home Made Tools
Well, it may not be exactly in the same category as these other tools, but it is a tool and it is home made.
I actually made it quite a few years ago. It has come in handy many times and it still works.
The story behind it starts one evening when a bunch of friends and me were all sitting around having a few beers. Someone made the suggestion that it might be kind of cool if each one of us would build some kind of small project just for the hell of it. The only stipulation was that we all had to agree to build the same thing, but we could build it anyway we wanted. When we were done we would all bring them so we could see what everyone made. So, everyone thought it was a cool idea, but what could we build? Somebody suggested a clock and there were a few other suggestions too, including a test light. Finally, we all agreed to build test lights. I decided to make this dual-voltage test light out of an old cigarette lighter.
The 120 Volt side
...and the 12 Volt side.
The things we think of when we're drinkin' and bored!
I actually made it quite a few years ago. It has come in handy many times and it still works.
The story behind it starts one evening when a bunch of friends and me were all sitting around having a few beers. Someone made the suggestion that it might be kind of cool if each one of us would build some kind of small project just for the hell of it. The only stipulation was that we all had to agree to build the same thing, but we could build it anyway we wanted. When we were done we would all bring them so we could see what everyone made. So, everyone thought it was a cool idea, but what could we build? Somebody suggested a clock and there were a few other suggestions too, including a test light. Finally, we all agreed to build test lights. I decided to make this dual-voltage test light out of an old cigarette lighter.
The 120 Volt side
...and the 12 Volt side.
The things we think of when we're drinkin' and bored!
390 FE IN A "BUMP" / 383 WEDGE IN A 2 DOOR C-BODY / 351W IN A FULL-SIZE MERCURY / 194 CHEVY 6 IN A DUECE / 2.4 DOHC CHRYSLER IN A PLASTIC BUBBLE (Driver)
- timmytim
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 11:47 pm
- Location: suburb of Birmingham Alabama
Re: Home Made Tools
that's real cool Nitekruizer
buy'em dirty sale'em clean
get more money for the same
machine.....
My 1967 bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 09#p668209
My 1970 Bump: http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 16&t=50726
- Nitekruizer
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 545
- Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2011 1:43 pm
- Location: Manitoba, Canada
Re: Home Made Tools
Thanks!
390 FE IN A "BUMP" / 383 WEDGE IN A 2 DOOR C-BODY / 351W IN A FULL-SIZE MERCURY / 194 CHEVY 6 IN A DUECE / 2.4 DOHC CHRYSLER IN A PLASTIC BUBBLE (Driver)