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  2. well its 410 average here and all over california last go around with king trump it was same as yours
  3. I appreciate all the help and advice that people have given me on here
  4. 87 octane averages $2.99 around me. Gasoline can't fall much lower than that. Both Biden and President Trump harped on lowering gasoline pump prices. But it can't get much lower or the oil companies aren't making any money.
  5. well you guys just but a big addition to this page,,,,very well said,,,,,i hate to see struggling familys working even harder than they already are,,,,but this 5000 stimulus check would help conciderably,,,lower taxes,gasoline prices dropping soon,best of luck to everyone involved,,bob
  6. Yea the largest contractor the USPS has is Fed Ex. Has been that way for a long time. That contract is worth like $1.5 billion annually. Top U.S. Postal Service Suppliers in 2023:β€Ž Transportation Suppliers Again Carry the Mail β€Ž – TLA
  7. i dont have too much trouble with them here,,,,but they are very slow,,,,but most or all of thier road work is farmed out,,,atleast here,,,bob
  8. Today
  9. Ive seen those in Iveco trucks. I think Valeo was the brand name. I have only seen a few, and i do not have the spanner wrench in my tool box, which means I didnt see a lot of them.. πŸ˜‰
  10. Yeah, I know about Lipe, but there are also other stamp steel covers that don't have an adjustment internally. I just want to make sure before he got it together. Not as common as the cast cover clutches. I admit to being wrong, but better to make sure before it is all buttoned up. Glad to see him go back with organic disks.
  11. Yup it’s known as a lipe clutch here should work
  12. Grandpa always said β€œuse it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without”
  13. Hope this pic makes sense buddy
  14. Ok, then I was wrong. We don't use a lot of stamped steel covers here. Thanks for the info!
  15. The Democrats couldn't possibly believe what they're saying. These are intelligent people. Rather, it's as though they are reading from a script. They are controlled.
  16. There’s a castle nut you adjust behind the bearing for the internal adjust of the clutch bud
  17. The stock market selloff deepened, bonds pared gains and oil hit a four-year low, with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell today reiterating the central bank’s wait-and-see approach. Powell said the economic damage of a trade war will be bigger than anticipated.
  18. Not sure it will, the Spicer and truck linkage is set up for an internal clutch adjustment. That mean the linkage doesn't change when the clutch is adjusted. That stamped steel cover, I see no internal adjustment, and may be designed for a clutch set up where the linkage gets adjusted. On those the clutch brake (if used) has to have a separate way to keep the clutch brake in adjustment. Without adjustment internally the throw-out bearing keeps moving as the clutch wears. I could be wrong, but have always replaced cast cover with cast cover.
  19. Is the USPS even relevant anymore? Last I heard they were insolvent and had to be propped up with borrowed taxpayer money to operate every year. Get rid of it and auction everything it owns of to the highest bidder. Why do I care if the USPS, UPS, DHL, or Fed Ex brings my junk to my doorstep. At least the latter three don't operate on borrowed taxpayer money. If there is a continued need or desire by the market for daily letter mail delivery a business from the private sector will be able do it better and cheaper than the USPS boondoggle can.
  20. Not a spicer but will do the job
  21. In short, he in one sense went too far. In another sense, he has not spoken clearly. The idea is right, but the execution is wrong. Apparently, he's listening to the wrong advisors (Lutnick, Navarro) rather than the right ones (JD Vance, Suzie Wiles and Scott Bessent).
  22. i still dont understand why the demonrats feel it is ok for foreign countries to impose 20,30,nd 40 % tariffs on american exports, but it is the end of the world as we know it for america to impose tariffs on those same countries imports into america.
  23. I'm all for gutting large portions of the federal government and eliminating all the waste fraud and abuse. Heck, I would probably support eliminating non fraudulent and abusive sections of federal government. Its an absolute disgrace what it has become in terms or usefulness and wastefulness. at $36 trillion in debt it is obviously completely insolvent and Congress and Presidents refuse to take any meaningful action on it. THE only reason this asinine amount of debt hasn't become a crisis yet is because the US Dollar is the world's reserve currency, which is starting to come under threat but that is a topic for a different discussion. I'm very confident the United States' national debt could be reduced to 50% of GDP by year 2050 and the average citizen would not know the difference. However, since Congress refuses to take action, and on the contrary, actually doubles down on even larger budget deficits year after year you get what you have now. Trump in there with a chainsaw. Fine. Who cares. If that's what its going to take then so be it. Both parties and Congress going back at least 50 years only have themselves to blame for letting it get to this point. I would say Trump is doing the correct thing by employing auditors to go in a slash all this trash this corrupt government has been building for decades. With that said I think Trump is very dangerously playing with fire with regards to implementing tariffs of this quantity and magnitude as well as his handling of international relations with extremely close allies and neighbors. I'm not an economist. This is only my opinion based on some limited economics education and studying of history and trade policies since WWII. When implemented like this, tariffs pretty much always have an overall negative consequence, especially for the tariffing country. A tariff is a tax, and with any business tax, it is paid by the consumer. Businesses never pay tax, they only collect them. The only way prices don't increase is if the business takes a loss on their profit which is possible if there is a US competitor. But realistically speaking how may US based competitors are there for essentially every single thing coming into this country? The USA has not been a manufacturing country for decades. To think that is going to suddenly reverse course in a few years is simply daft. Moreover, I just don't see any overall alignment on this among political parties, politicians, or even economists for that matter to last any longer than this administration. And the election cycle and balance of power in this country is too fickle. in 3.5 years there will be a different president elected and if these tariffs are still in place they will most likely be all walked back. My guess is most offshore manufacturers will ride it out and sell at a smaller profit (if there is an a non-tariffed competitor here in country) and wait and see for 3.5 years. All the while the average citizen and retail investor will be getting hammered. This is akin to a brain surgeon using a chainsaw to remove a patient's brain tumor. I don't think this is the proper way to undo decades worth of offshoring. I would welcome anyone to find a reputable left or right leaning economist who thinks this is a good plan. I'll remain somewhat open minded and hope this is a strategy to "strongarm" other nations into negotiating a more favorable, long term trade deal with the USA but I don't have high hopes. At best everything is going to get more expensive, and we will slog on until the tariffs are eventually lifted, and we are back to where we started. At worst this will set off an all-out global trade war with the USA. I personally want neither.
  24. More tender words...to quote from Convoy"tell'em like it is Pig Pen,you got it,yes sir....But your right.No way is that a 45g truck.its a resto project.. Paul
  25. I deleted the brackets on my B73 and put the exhaust on a late model support arm. The later L cabs only seem to have had two brackets, one near the top below the louvers. The lower one was mounted to the lower internal cab frame in the corner. There were spacers inside the lower mount to make up the gap between the skin and the frame. I saved my two brackets, but they were pretty rusty and had been modified by previous owners. Let me see if I can locate them. Here's a picture on the corner of the cab with the skin removed. The upper bracket is still in place on mine. The two lower, short brackets below are for the grab handle. Then the lower frame of the cab. Second picture is after I painted it, but before I put two polished stainless bolts in the threaded holes as place holders. I left the bracket as it stiffens the area and if someone in the future wanted to add the bracket back. I've seem the schematic you posted before. The four bracket arrangement may have been for the heavier LJ-X versions like yours. I don't think regular LJ's had that type of arrangement.
  26. And yes, that shade was very common on the older Mercury cougars
  27. I pulled 170K through a 14" organic coupled to a engine that was was over 425hp and 1400 lb/ft torque. Never wore out an organic clutch, the closest I came was when the pressure plate failed, spilling all its fingers and springs into the bell housing.
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