nuvz - To answer your questions.

   / nuvz - To answer your questions. #1  

LBrown59

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2003 Kubota BX1500/2004 Kubota Bx23/2005 Kubota BX1500
Well, lets look at this logically.... washing machine - what kind? wringer or new fangled automatic? Could give us a better idea there...
lawn mower here we go again... reel type or rotary, power or push... could play a big part in my guess!
1934 Plymouth - 2 door or 4 door?
bicycle - mens or womens? ten speed? 3 speed? coaster brakes?
mine bolts - our your bolts?
pipe the type you smoke or just plain old steel stuuff?
Jack shaft - or jill shaft??
and a twin size bed? which part? frame, mattress or springs?
The devil is in the details!! Help me here!!
nuvz
=======================

(Keep in mind this was 50 years or so ago.)

1*washing machine - automatic?
We used two of the gears that made the agitator go back and forth. This was used to construct the steering mechanics. Un like most automative steering that was made up of a steering gear box tie rods and other linkage we were basically able to use one set up which did the job of a steering gear box and the linkage all in one arrangement. We didn't need tie rods and all that linkage as all that was required was a short connector to each front wheel.
We also used one of the pulleys that rotated the washer drum on one end of the speed reduction jack shaft.

2*lawn mower here we go again... ?
Motorized reel mower. These were used before the rotary mower was invented. Anyone remember them?
We used the engine for our power plant.

3*1934 Plymouth - 2 door or 4 door?
Don't know doesn't matter anyway because all we used was the steering wheel.

4*bicycle - mens or womens? Could have been either.
All we used was the small rear wheel sprocket to put on the other end of the speed reduction jack shaft. we welded the larger pedal crank sprocket to the inside of the left rear wheel. and used a section of the bicycle chain to connect the two sprockets

5*mine bolts - our your bolts?
The kind they use to support coal mine ceilings to help prevent cave in ins.
We lived about a block from the factory that was one of if not the largest supplier of these bolts to the mining industry. They would buy square stock and turn it down to make the bolts.
We bought 2 pieces of 1" in stock from them and my uncle who was a machinist turned them down on the ends to make the axles.

6*pipe the type you smoke or just plain old steel stuff?
Probably 3/4" STEEL.
We used pipe for several things. One thing we used it for was the combination motor mount clutch.

7*Jack shaft - or jill shaft??
Actually the type used to increase or decrease speed depending on which one is your goal.
You might say this became our one speed no reverse transmission.

8*and a twin size bed? Which part? frame, mattress or springs?
Frame we used it for the chassis, under carriage or what ever you want to call it.
=====
About the only thing we had to buy that wasn't some part off of some old junked thing was the 4 new store bought wheels.

Guess we didn't have any kind of old junk around that had any wheels on it.







Needless to say my cousin & I were the envy of all the other kids in the neighborhood.
50 years ago they all wanted us to take them for a ride on what just might have been the first go cart ever or at least the most unique one ever built.

I wish I would have kept it.
Today it would have been a unique one of a kind keepsake and a really great conversion piece.
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions. #2  
After all of that I don't really believe that story. Sorry.

Happy Holidays
Steve
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions. #3  
I knew it..I knew it...I knew it!!!!
A device that would allow little people to drive a '34 Plymouth....LOL
It's just too bad that kids have to have something expensive out of a "Motosports" dealer these days...I'm 43 years old and still have yet to own one of what you built....but I do have five tractors!!! /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions.
  • Thread Starter
#4  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I knew it..I knew it...I knew it!!!!
A device that would allow little people to drive a '34 Plymouth....LOL
It's just too bad that kids have to have something expensive out of a "Motosports" dealer these days...I'm 43 years old and still have yet to own one of what you built....but I do have five tractors!!! /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif )</font>
=========


I knew it..I knew it...I knew it!!!!
1*A device that would allow little people to drive a '34 Plymouth....LOL
2*It's just too bad that kids have to have something expensive out of a "Motosports" dealer these days...
3*I'm 43 years old and still have yet to own one of what you built....

-----------------
1*bobodu
Might have been close when he posted that (If all it takes is a 34 Plymouth steering wheel to do that.) That's why I asked him what he was talking about.
2*Me and my cousin were always doing something like that when we were kids.
One time we bolted a motor to the luggage carrier on the back of my bicycle and attached a rear wheel pulley off and old WHIZZER Motor Bike to the back wheel of my bicycle slipped a belt on it and rode away on the only bicycle in town with a motor on it.
Anybody here remember the Whizzers?
Kids today miss out a lot from not doing things like this.
Back then we didn't have video games and computers to occupy all our time so we had to be creative and inventive to find things to do.
3*We built this years before you were ever born.
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions.
  • Thread Starter
#5  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( After all of that I don't really believe that story. Sorry.

Happy Holidays
Steve )</font>

=================
If kids back then were like they are today I wouldn't believe it either.
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions. #6  
I know that I might be prying or just being nosy and I didnt understand the posting, but was this some sort of go-cart or something. If it was, I believe it. I remember my dad (born in 1930, PA) telling something similar about using a washing machine transmission and engine on a cart. Problem was he said after a few feet forward you could not stop it from going into reverse.
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions. #7  
well we finally got you to tell /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
we made it in the end /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions. #8  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">(


Kids today miss out a lot from not doing things like this.
Back then we didn't have video games and computers to occupy all our time so we had to be creative and inventive to find things to do.



)</font>

I hear that!!! Tami's boy is sixteen and gets bored sooo easily.When I was his age,I had been ringing steel from a homemade forge for two years already...
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions.
  • Thread Starter
#9  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( well we finally got you to tell /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
we made it in the end /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif )</font>

Some people want patience right now, what can I say.LOOL
 
   / nuvz - To answer your questions.
  • Thread Starter
#10  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I know that I might be prying or just being nosy and I didnt understand the posting, but was this some sort of go-cart or something. If it was, I believe it. I remember my dad (born in 1930, PA) telling something similar about using a washing machine transmission and engine on a cart. Problem was he said after a few feet forward you could not stop it from going into reverse. )</font>
I know that I might be prying or just being nosy and I didn't understand the posting,

1*but was this some sort of go-cart or something.
2*If it was, I believe it.
3*I remember my dad (born in 1930, PA) telling something similar about using a washing machine transmission and engine on a cart.
4*Problem was he said after a few feet forward you could not stop it from going into reverse.


1*Yes it was a go cart we made years before they ever came out with go carts.
Did you read this thread (can you guess what my cousin his dad and I made) in this forum?
2*No reason not to believe it as there is nothing farfetched or impossible about building it. If it wasn't possible and couldn't be done somebody should have told us back then before we built it LOL.
3* The motor and transmission your are talking about must have been off an old Maytag Gasoline engine clothes washer.
Using an electric motor would not have been practical.

Who all recalls the old Maytags with the gasoline engines?

4*That was because the agitator in a washer keeps going back and forth.
Take the agitator off the shaft and power a go cart or anything else from the shaft and it will do the same thing as the agitator did.
You don't want the drive wheel on a go cart to alternately keep rotating forward and backward.
That is why we didn't use the washing machine for the transmission but opted for a jack shaft to transfer power from the lawn mower motor to the go cart rear wheel.
We did use a couple of the parts from the washing machine transmission that allowed the forward and backward movement you described but used it for the steering as you want the front wheels to turn left and right.
We basically controlled the steering with a gear box that didn't require any tie rods or linkage.
All it had was a short connector from the front wheels to the gear box.
Have never seen such a slick steering system on anything else.
Another unique one of a kind feature was the clutch system.
To go you pushed a lever forward which slid the motor rearward and tightened the drive belt going from the motor to the jack shaft pulley.
To stop you pulled the lever back and the motor slide forward loosing the drive belt.
A nice thing about this is there was no belt slipping like there can be with belt tighteners.
This was the only belt on the Go Cart.
 

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