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How to Remove Piston from Cylinder



 
 
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  #21  
Old October 4th 08, 03:40 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
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Posts: 451
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

Anthony W wrote:
Dan wrote:

Hand grenades are also very effective for painting rooms. One opens
a can of paint, places it on the floor in the geometric centre of the
room, pulls the pin from the grenade, drops it into the, vacates the
room, and voi ci, a painted room.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


I'd like to see Myth Busters try this one... ;o)

Tony


I wonder if they'd fly me in to supervise.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
  #22  
Old October 4th 08, 03:43 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Tim Ward[_1_]
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Posts: 49
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder


"Anthony W" wrote in message
...
Dan wrote:

Hand grenades are also very effective for painting rooms. One opens a
can of paint, places it on the floor in the geometric centre of the
room, pulls the pin from the grenade, drops it into the, vacates the
room, and voi ci, a painted room.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


I'd like to see Myth Busters try this one... ;o)

Tony


They did. Episode 52.


  #23  
Old October 4th 08, 06:37 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Anthony W
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 282
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

Tim Ward wrote:
"Anthony W" wrote in message
...
Dan wrote:

Hand grenades are also very effective for painting rooms. One opens a
can of paint, places it on the floor in the geometric centre of the
room, pulls the pin from the grenade, drops it into the, vacates the
room, and voi ci, a painted room.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired

I'd like to see Myth Busters try this one... ;o)

Tony


They did. Episode 52.


Damn, sorry I missed that one...

Tony
  #24  
Old October 5th 08, 06:12 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
John Clear
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Posts: 152
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

In article ,
Anthony W wrote:
Tim Ward wrote:
"Anthony W" wrote in message
...
Dan wrote:

Hand grenades are also very effective for painting rooms. One opens a
can of paint, places it on the floor in the geometric centre of the
room, pulls the pin from the grenade, drops it into the, vacates the
room, and voi ci, a painted room.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
I'd like to see Myth Busters try this one... ;o)

Tony


They did. Episode 52.


Damn, sorry I missed that one...


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MythBus...ith_Explosives

Painting With Explosives

This myth originated from the episode "Do-It-Yourself, Mr. Bean"
of the British comedy series Mr. Bean starring Rowan Atkinson.

Myth statement: A small room can be quickly painted by detonating
a stick of dynamite in a bucket of paint.

Status: Busted

Notes: A stick of dynamite in a bucket of paint cannot distribute
the paint evenly enough to fully paint the room; only 40% of the
room (around the bottom and part of the ceiling) received paint,
and the room took some shrapnel damage (even from a plastic bucket).
Furthermore, Adam's and Jamie's customized contraptions, designed
to help distribute the paint more evenly, failed to produce any
successful results or an intact room.

-------

I love the last line. Classic Mythbusters.
--
John Clear - http://www.clear-prop.org/

  #25  
Old October 6th 08, 04:22 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.homebuilt
Paul Dow (Remove Caps in mail address)
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Posts: 62
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

Hello Walter,

Thank you for that link. I wasn't aware that it is on the web. My friend
didn't have the parts manual. He does have the 6 cylinder model, so that
information should be very useful to us.

Also, it looks like your posting did appear in the newsgroup. I think
some newsgroup servers don't update very quickly.

It looks like the messages on the newsgroup have migrated to a
discussion about explosives now :-)

Paul

Walter Kronester wrote:
Hi Paul,
do you know this document, mainly the drawing around page 2-40 or at 2-35?
http://www.franklin.ioi.pl/dokumenty...ts_Catalog.pdf

http://www.franklin.ioi.pl/dokumenty/IPC_4A235_B4.pdf

It seems the cylinder liner can be pulled if the lock pin is removed.

Much luck
Walter


  #26  
Old October 6th 08, 10:01 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning,rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 451
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

Paul Dow (Remove Caps in mail address) wrote:
Hello Walter,

Thank you for that link. I wasn't aware that it is on the web. My friend
didn't have the parts manual. He does have the 6 cylinder model, so that
information should be very useful to us.

Also, it looks like your posting did appear in the newsgroup. I think
some newsgroup servers don't update very quickly.

It looks like the messages on the newsgroup have migrated to a
discussion about explosives now :-)

Paul


You say that like it's a bad thing. Explosives can come in handy.
Example your starter dies, hand propping isn't working and you want to
crank the engine, just remove a spark plug, put a handful of black
powder in the cylinder, insert fuse and rag to act as a plug, light fuse
and hop in. Explosives can also be used for emergency tire inflation.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
  #27  
Old October 7th 08, 02:22 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Tech Support
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 122
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

On Mon, 06 Oct 2008 16:01:02 -0500, Dan wrote:

Paul Dow (Remove Caps in mail address) wrote:
Hello Walter,

Thank you for that link. I wasn't aware that it is on the web. My friend
didn't have the parts manual. He does have the 6 cylinder model, so that
information should be very useful to us.

Also, it looks like your posting did appear in the newsgroup. I think
some newsgroup servers don't update very quickly.

It looks like the messages on the newsgroup have migrated to a
discussion about explosives now :-)

Paul


You say that like it's a bad thing. Explosives can come in handy.
Example your starter dies, hand propping isn't working and you want to
crank the engine, just remove a spark plug, put a handful of black
powder in the cylinder, insert fuse and rag to act as a plug, light fuse
and hop in. Explosives can also be used for emergency tire inflation.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired

**********************************************

Dan

Why can't you put in cylinder and use plug to light off????

Big John
  #28  
Old October 7th 08, 03:55 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 451
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

Tech Support wrote:
On Mon, 06 Oct 2008 16:01:02 -0500, Dan wrote:

Paul Dow (Remove Caps in mail address) wrote:
Hello Walter,

Thank you for that link. I wasn't aware that it is on the web. My friend
didn't have the parts manual. He does have the 6 cylinder model, so that
information should be very useful to us.

Also, it looks like your posting did appear in the newsgroup. I think
some newsgroup servers don't update very quickly.

It looks like the messages on the newsgroup have migrated to a
discussion about explosives now :-)

Paul

You say that like it's a bad thing. Explosives can come in handy.
Example your starter dies, hand propping isn't working and you want to
crank the engine, just remove a spark plug, put a handful of black
powder in the cylinder, insert fuse and rag to act as a plug, light fuse
and hop in. Explosives can also be used for emergency tire inflation.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired

**********************************************

Dan

Why can't you put in cylinder and use plug to light off????

Big John


I'm assuming the think won't turn over in the first place. If it can
be turned enough to obtain a spark one can add saltpeter, sulfur,
aluminum powder and confectioner's sugar in the proper proportions if
one is out of black powder. Not that I know anything about the
particulars, you understand.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
  #29  
Old October 8th 08, 06:13 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Tech Support
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 122
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

On Mon, 06 Oct 2008 21:55:27 -0500, Dan wrote:

Tech Support wrote:
On Mon, 06 Oct 2008 16:01:02 -0500, Dan wrote:

Paul Dow (Remove Caps in mail address) wrote:
Hello Walter,

Thank you for that link. I wasn't aware that it is on the web. My friend
didn't have the parts manual. He does have the 6 cylinder model, so that
information should be very useful to us.

Also, it looks like your posting did appear in the newsgroup. I think
some newsgroup servers don't update very quickly.

It looks like the messages on the newsgroup have migrated to a
discussion about explosives now :-)

Paul

You say that like it's a bad thing. Explosives can come in handy.
Example your starter dies, hand propping isn't working and you want to
crank the engine, just remove a spark plug, put a handful of black
powder in the cylinder, insert fuse and rag to act as a plug, light fuse
and hop in. Explosives can also be used for emergency tire inflation.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired

**********************************************

Dan

Why can't you put in cylinder and use plug to light off????

Big John


I'm assuming the think won't turn over in the first place. If it can
be turned enough to obtain a spark one can add saltpeter, sulfur,
aluminum powder and confectioner's sugar in the proper proportions if
one is out of black powder. Not that I know anything about the
particulars, you understand.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired

************************************************** *************************

Dan

As a teenager I used potasum clorate and sulpher.

Poured a spot on cement and kicked with heel plate and went off.

Also put in a CO2 cartridge and set off with home made fuse. Made a
powerful rocket (half a city block).

How I ever survived growing up I don't know looking back.

Big John
  #30  
Old October 8th 08, 07:26 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 451
Default How to Remove Piston from Cylinder

Tech Support wrote:
On Mon, 06 Oct 2008 21:55:27 -0500, Dan wrote:

Tech Support wrote:
On Mon, 06 Oct 2008 16:01:02 -0500, Dan wrote:

Paul Dow (Remove Caps in mail address) wrote:
Hello Walter,

Thank you for that link. I wasn't aware that it is on the web. My friend
didn't have the parts manual. He does have the 6 cylinder model, so that
information should be very useful to us.

Also, it looks like your posting did appear in the newsgroup. I think
some newsgroup servers don't update very quickly.

It looks like the messages on the newsgroup have migrated to a
discussion about explosives now :-)

Paul

You say that like it's a bad thing. Explosives can come in handy.
Example your starter dies, hand propping isn't working and you want to
crank the engine, just remove a spark plug, put a handful of black
powder in the cylinder, insert fuse and rag to act as a plug, light fuse
and hop in. Explosives can also be used for emergency tire inflation.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
**********************************************

Dan

Why can't you put in cylinder and use plug to light off????

Big John

I'm assuming the think won't turn over in the first place. If it can
be turned enough to obtain a spark one can add saltpeter, sulfur,
aluminum powder and confectioner's sugar in the proper proportions if
one is out of black powder. Not that I know anything about the
particulars, you understand.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired

************************************************** *************************

Dan

As a teenager I used potasum clorate and sulpher.

Poured a spot on cement and kicked with heel plate and went off.

Also put in a CO2 cartridge and set off with home made fuse. Made a
powerful rocket (half a city block).

How I ever survived growing up I don't know looking back.

Big John


Looking back I can see several occasions where I should have been
injured or killed with some things I did. I proved launching a plastic
model Saturn V is possible with off the shelf C engines. I also proved
that didn't include going in the intended direction.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
 




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