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#11
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![]() "Charles B. Summers" wrote in message ... Ok, so far so good... I'm not using the isolators, and have managed to get the old motor off and hahve two of the six bolts installed on the new one. What's cool is that the old holes match the new ones, so I only need to drill two more holes. (Break time right now) The trick now is to manage to get way up to the nose of the boat with my extended ratchet and figure a way to get the washer on with the nut. Gonna try taping it to the socket to see what'll happen. LOL When I had my Tuffy boat, that's what I did. Sounds silly but it worked. On one particularly tight spot, I used my 7 year old daughter to get her skinny little arm up in the right spot under the front mount. You've still got little kids..... -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
#12
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Yeah... I though about using Bradley, but he was too busy digging holes in
the front yard! That was after he knocked my tool box upside down in the driveway. The girls wouldn't even stick their heads out the door in fear of manual labor! "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in message ... "Charles B. Summers" wrote in message ... Ok, so far so good... I'm not using the isolators, and have managed to get the old motor off and hahve two of the six bolts installed on the new one. What's cool is that the old holes match the new ones, so I only need to drill two more holes. (Break time right now) The trick now is to manage to get way up to the nose of the boat with my extended ratchet and figure a way to get the washer on with the nut. Gonna try taping it to the socket to see what'll happen. LOL When I had my Tuffy boat, that's what I did. Sounds silly but it worked. On one particularly tight spot, I used my 7 year old daughter to get her skinny little arm up in the right spot under the front mount. You've still got little kids..... -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
#13
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You know it's legal to pick up roadkill here in TN.
I'm not sure people enjoy watching me field-dress a fresh-killed doe right next to a busy suburban street, but no one seems to mind if I haul it home, hang it up in the side yard and do my business there. As long as we don't put a bullet in the carcass, we're ok. I think I'm the only guy in Brentwood who does this.... When I decide not to take the meat, a carcass will lie there for up to a week before city services finally scoops it up. With over 150,000 deer killed by vehicles in the state each year (180,000 are lumped in the "traffic kills/poaching" category), that's a lot of free food just there for the taking. We get a lot of deer in the yard. I'm not sure if running them down with the yard tractor would qualify as roadkill, but I may put that to the test if they don't stop eating the bark off my fruit trees! By the time I'd have trouble distinguishing roadkill from a mudflap, though -- even at a distance in a moving vehicle -- I'd say the critter is past prime and should be passed on by. Joe ________________ "Bob Rickard" wrote in message ... Wow! I pull over for any kind of old roadkill. I knew we were just alike, Joe. "Joe Haubenreich" rofbmail (at) secretweaponlures (dot) com wrote in message ... Charles, I have several truck mud flaps in the garage, too. Let me know if you want them. When I see them lying by the road, I pull over and toss them in the truck. They've come in real handy for a number of projects over time, so I keep a couple on hand. Joe _________ "Jerry Barton (NervisRek)" wrote in message ... Outstanding suggestions Pat. I just happen to have a couple of truck mud flaps in the garage, but I'm sure he'll want to install it way before we get to Center Hill. Now I'm thinking about changing mine to the way you said. "Pat Goff @yahoo.com" pmgoffjrbot wrote in message ... Charles, Take those rubber pieces of garbage and throw them straight into the trash. Useless would be a compliment. Here's Pats two best way to mount a troll motor. 1. Absolute best way: **IF** you can get underneath to thru bolt it on, go buy a rubber truck mud flap, cut it out the same size as your troll motor mount. set your mount on the big rubber pad you just made, and use stainless bolts, fiber lock nuts and the biggest dang washers you can, and suck that mount down to the deck. It will never give you trouble. 2. Almost abolute best way. If you can NOT hold a wrench under the deck to thru bolt, get some stainless "togglers" which can be had at your marine dealer, use the same mudflap for a bracket pad, and those will never give you trouble. Those cheezy rubber isolators are just a disaster waiting to happen. "Charles B. Summers" wrote in message ... Ok, time for another round of "Charles's Idiot Questions", with your host... Charles Summers! Thank you contestants, you know the rules... the first person with the most convincing argument wins! First question, for $100... I went to the local BPS to pick up some of those little rubber trolling motor bolts and a connector cable for the batteries. After getting home and opening the box the new trolling motor was in, I found a little bag of 6 long bolts, washers, and nuts, and after reading the directions... they are for mounting the motor to the boat. But, the rubber ones are for mounting too! So, which method should I go with? The rubber isolators or the bolts with nuts? Now... before you jump in here, there is a part two. The rubber bolts keep the trolling motor from resting on the gelcoat preventing damage. If I went with the bolts that were in the box, should I use something with them to prevent the mount from damaging the gelcoat, or is mounting the motor without a cushion ok? insert calming music here |
#14
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On Sun, 6 Mar 2005 07:24:51 -0600, "Joe Haubenreich" rofbmail (at)
secretweaponlures (dot) com sent into the ether: You know it's legal to pick up roadkill here in TN. I'm not sure people enjoy watching me field-dress a fresh-killed doe right next to a busy suburban street, but no one seems to mind if I haul it home, hang it up in the side yard and do my business there. As long as we don't put a bullet in the carcass, we're ok. I think I'm the only guy in Brentwood who does this.... When I decide not to take the meat, a carcass will lie there for up to a week before city services finally scoops it up. With over 150,000 deer killed by vehicles in the state each year (180,000 are lumped in the "traffic kills/poaching" category), that's a lot of free food just there for the taking. We get a lot of deer in the yard. I'm not sure if running them down with the yard tractor would qualify as roadkill, but I may put that to the test if they don't stop eating the bark off my fruit trees! By the time I'd have trouble distinguishing roadkill from a mudflap, though -- even at a distance in a moving vehicle -- I'd say the critter is past prime and should be passed on by. Joe, isn't that called hard tack :} Joe ________________ "Bob Rickard" wrote in message ... Wow! I pull over for any kind of old roadkill. I knew we were just alike, Joe. "Joe Haubenreich" rofbmail (at) secretweaponlures (dot) com wrote in message ... Charles, I have several truck mud flaps in the garage, too. Let me know if you want them. When I see them lying by the road, I pull over and toss them in the truck. They've come in real handy for a number of projects over time, so I keep a couple on hand. Joe _________ "Jerry Barton (NervisRek)" wrote in message ... Outstanding suggestions Pat. I just happen to have a couple of truck mud flaps in the garage, but I'm sure he'll want to install it way before we get to Center Hill. Now I'm thinking about changing mine to the way you said. "Pat Goff @yahoo.com" pmgoffjrbot wrote in message ... Charles, Take those rubber pieces of garbage and throw them straight into the trash. Useless would be a compliment. Here's Pats two best way to mount a troll motor. 1. Absolute best way: **IF** you can get underneath to thru bolt it on, go buy a rubber truck mud flap, cut it out the same size as your troll motor mount. set your mount on the big rubber pad you just made, and use stainless bolts, fiber lock nuts and the biggest dang washers you can, and suck that mount down to the deck. It will never give you trouble. 2. Almost abolute best way. If you can NOT hold a wrench under the deck to thru bolt, get some stainless "togglers" which can be had at your marine dealer, use the same mudflap for a bracket pad, and those will never give you trouble. Those cheezy rubber isolators are just a disaster waiting to happen. "Charles B. Summers" wrote in message ... Ok, time for another round of "Charles's Idiot Questions", with your host... Charles Summers! Thank you contestants, you know the rules... the first person with the most convincing argument wins! First question, for $100... I went to the local BPS to pick up some of those little rubber trolling motor bolts and a connector cable for the batteries. After getting home and opening the box the new trolling motor was in, I found a little bag of 6 long bolts, washers, and nuts, and after reading the directions... they are for mounting the motor to the boat. But, the rubber ones are for mounting too! So, which method should I go with? The rubber isolators or the bolts with nuts? Now... before you jump in here, there is a part two. The rubber bolts keep the trolling motor from resting on the gelcoat preventing damage. If I went with the bolts that were in the box, should I use something with them to prevent the mount from damaging the gelcoat, or is mounting the motor without a cushion ok? insert calming music here Remove the x for e-mail reply www.outdoorfrontiers.com www.SecretWeaponLures.com A proud charter member of "PETAF", People for Eating Tasty Animals and Fish!!! |
#15
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Truck mud flaps are great for lots of stuff. I used a pice of one to make a
mud deflector on my wife's harley on the front of the rear fender to keep it from throwing mud and dirt all over her transmissions and engine. -- ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com "Joe Haubenreich" rofbmail (at) secretweaponlures (dot) com wrote in message ... Charles, I have several truck mud flaps in the garage, too. Let me know if you want them. When I see them lying by the road, I pull over and toss them in the truck. They've come in real handy for a number of projects over time, so I keep a couple on hand. Joe _________ "Jerry Barton (NervisRek)" wrote in message ... Outstanding suggestions Pat. I just happen to have a couple of truck mud flaps in the garage, but I'm sure he'll want to install it way before we get to Center Hill. Now I'm thinking about changing mine to the way you said. "Pat Goff @yahoo.com" pmgoffjrbot wrote in message ... Charles, Take those rubber pieces of garbage and throw them straight into the trash. Useless would be a compliment. Here's Pats two best way to mount a troll motor. 1. Absolute best way: **IF** you can get underneath to thru bolt it on, go buy a rubber truck mud flap, cut it out the same size as your troll motor mount. set your mount on the big rubber pad you just made, and use stainless bolts, fiber lock nuts and the biggest dang washers you can, and suck that mount down to the deck. It will never give you trouble. 2. Almost abolute best way. If you can NOT hold a wrench under the deck to thru bolt, get some stainless "togglers" which can be had at your marine dealer, use the same mudflap for a bracket pad, and those will never give you trouble. Those cheezy rubber isolators are just a disaster waiting to happen. "Charles B. Summers" wrote in message ... Ok, time for another round of "Charles's Idiot Questions", with your host... Charles Summers! Thank you contestants, you know the rules... the first person with the most convincing argument wins! First question, for $100... I went to the local BPS to pick up some of those little rubber trolling motor bolts and a connector cable for the batteries. After getting home and opening the box the new trolling motor was in, I found a little bag of 6 long bolts, washers, and nuts, and after reading the directions... they are for mounting the motor to the boat. But, the rubber ones are for mounting too! So, which method should I go with? The rubber isolators or the bolts with nuts? Now... before you jump in here, there is a part two. The rubber bolts keep the trolling motor from resting on the gelcoat preventing damage. If I went with the bolts that were in the box, should I use something with them to prevent the mount from damaging the gelcoat, or is mounting the motor without a cushion ok? insert calming music here |
#16
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Road kill has tire tracks...
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#17
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AJH wrote:
Road kill has tire tracks... Like this? http://www.toptrucks.us/Photos_Shoul...free%20cat.jpg or this? http://tonova.typepad.com/thesuddencurve/armadillo.jpg |
#18
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I'm stll laughing at the thought of Joe and Bob trolling the highways for
rubber mats n road kill lol lol. -- God Bless America Josh The Bad Bear |
#19
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You wouldn't laugh so hard if you had to live through a few of those bad
roadkill days & settle for eating mud flaps. -- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "Joshuall" wrote in message ... I'm stll laughing at the thought of Joe and Bob trolling the highways for rubber mats n road kill lol lol. -- God Bless America Josh The Bad Bear |
#20
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Wanna talk about road kill? When Joe and I were on our way back from the
Oklahoma Hunting and Fishing Expo last year, I bet we didn't go five miles without smelling a freshly killed skunk! Is there a population problem in Oklahoma, or does it just always smell that way? BTW: Joe never mentioned stopping for one of those... "Bob Rickard" wrote in message m... You wouldn't laugh so hard if you had to live through a few of those bad roadkill days & settle for eating mud flaps. -- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) |
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