65 bucks for a large bag of dogsled fuel,last about a month! Not sure what the MPB is{miles per bag},they use fuel wheter you run them or not!
Roy,the powdercoat booth sound great,but isnt the oven part abit expensive to run on a small scale? I have a buddy who powdercoats small parts and uses an old stove to "bake" them!
That is exactly what you do for small parts, except it is an old oven, not a stove.
it is ONLY of bennefit in forced induction or high compression or engines tuned for it. Higher octane fuel doesn't burn better, it is just more resistant to combustion to prevent predetonation.
People who put it in cars tuned for lower octane are throwing $$$ dwn the drain and if they claim their car runs better then there is probably some other issue.
Quite true. However, if the ambient temperatures are really high, going one step up in octane may allow the engine (if it is configured to determine the fuel octane) to run at a better configuration which
could possibly provide slightly (<1%) better fuel mileage. 99% of the time, this would probably not be true.
you say that jokingly......but the last time gas hit 4/gallon, people were punching holes in gas tanks, and draining them. one of my friends runs a napa....they got 3 of his trucks.
Another good reason to own a Mini. Not worth the effort to punch a hole in the tank to drain the 2 or 3 gallons left in it.
Dang Skuzzy,
I'm figuring about 4,000 sq ft minimal for your man cave without future expansions, 480 volt wiring, expensive lighting. You left out your welding and finishing areas, and a massive air compressor and air lines in your posts. With a Vacuum former, you will need either a WaterJet or Laser to pre-cut your material, add another 1,000 sq ft. and machinery costs.
God bless you Skuzzy for keeping our economy rocking! This man deserves a Tax break.(The 1% I depend on for employment) where would we be if the government took all of their money? forced to work at Gunpoint.
Skuzzy has my utmost respect, After babysitting us, he goes home and produces products.(I always thought he was just the "Hitman" for High Tech) my bad.
GL on your endeavors, I'm still trying to crunch the numbers, I'm amazed! This is only part of his garage.
<S>
I not sure what my post has to do with the price of gas, here in Utah,reg 3.59...plus 3.71...Pre.....3.82
I did not list everything. There is Mig welding unit, upright 50 gallon compressor. I am looking at a CNC plasma cutting table, but until that happens I will hand cut using a scroll saw. Until I get a plasma table I will not be able to work with large parts.
The real garage is a two car affair for the Wife's Lexus and my Mini. Trying to figure out how to get a covered area for a truck and trailer (to haul the Cobra to far away events).
All of this is actually for my retirement. When I retire, I have no intention of just sitting around growing old and watching the grass grow.
You guys must all be driving hi performance vehicles.... The higher the octane the harder it is for your engine to ignite the gasses. Unless you all drive a BMW, Mercedes or something like that you are uselessly wasting your money. ....<snip>
My Mini has 11.5:1 compression ratio. The Wife's Lexus has 12:1 compression ratio. Both cars will run on regular fuel, at much reduced power levels. But, with unblended 93 octane fuel, my Mini gets 47MPG on the freeway @ 70MPH. With 91 octane blended fuel, it struggles to get 41MPG @ 70MPH.
Check out Mazda's new engines. 13:1 compression ratio.
Right now, I am paying about $0.03 to $0.05 cents a gallon more for the unblended 93 octane. You figure it out.
skuzzy drives a prius
Nope, just a Mini Cooper for me (for right now) and a Lexus IS250 for the Wife.