Bill, just a thought.  Is there enough thread to back the nuts off a little 
and add a second backup-locking nut? Or could you drill a small hole in the 
nut and insert a self tapping screw?
Lenny
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 02, 2008 5:39 PM
Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Greasing the wheels or not


Dale:
The instructions refer to the nut as a lock nut, but they say to tighten it 
down.  The spacers are just short pieces of tubing or pipe, and I'm thinking 
about maybe grinding them down a hair.  All the wheels are attached in the 
same  fashion.  I don't really have a jack, so I was hoping I wouldn't have 
to take all four wheels off and look at the spacers, but I might have to do 
that especially if I chicken  out on the grinding.  I guess too, that I 
could back the nuts off a half turn or so after putting some glue on the 
threads to keep them from vibrating off, does that sound like a good ide?
Thanks for any more thoughts.


Bill Stephan
Kansas Citty MO
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phone: (816)803-2469


----- Original Message -----
From: Dale Leavens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Monday, September 1, 2008 7:20 pm
Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Greasing the wheels or not
> Hi,
>
> Is this one of those self locking nuts that holds the wheel in
> place? The sort with a nylon bushing inside to keep it from
> spinning off?
>
> You probably need to back them off a half turn.
>
> Are the rear wheels held on differently to the front ones? You
> might get a hint from that.
>
> I am guessing that the wheels have a nylon or other high density
> poly bushing style bearing. If so you probably don't want a
> petroleum based lubricant, maybe graphite or Teflon, something dry
> not to attract dust to behave as an abrasive.
>
>
>  ----- Original Message ----- 
>  From: William Stephan
>  To: [email protected]
>  Sent: Monday, September 01, 2008 7:19 PM
>  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Greasing the wheels or not
>
>
>  Well, by way of background:
>
>  I finally bought myself a light-duty table saw from the lads at
> Harbor  Freight. It's light enough that I can move it around
> relatively easily,
>  though I'm sure it's not the most accurate thing available.
>
>  And, since I've done that, I needed to figure out how to get the
> lumber to
>  cut with the saw.
>
>  One of the folks on this list (I won't embarrase him), has this
> same problem
>  of how to haul stuff, and while we were at convention, he pretty
> well  convinced me that a large garden cart was a very necessary
> thing.
>  My wife green-lighted both purchases, and I was able to scrounge
> a ride
>  with a coworker with a really souped up, refrigerator white El
> Camino over
>  to the local Home Depot, during a pretty wild thunderstorm, and
> picked up
>  the cart, in a box of course.
>
>  I opened the carton on Saturday and looked over what I had. I
> understood  some of it, but not enough to put the thing together
> with even a prayer that
>  it would be right. I scanned the instruction sheet/manual, which
> was really
>  special because Spanish and English were commingled in the text.
>
>  Still no dyse. So, I bribed the fellow who does our book keeping
> and is an
>  occasional reader to come over on Sunday and spend about three
> hours in the
>  blazing sun putting the thing together. Even with him looking at the
>  diagram and reading the instructions, it was far far from
> intuitive, for me
>  anyway. Maybe if I had seen one of these assembled I could have
> figured it
>  out.
>
>  The bottom line now though is that the front wheels, while they
> do turn, are
>  not really what I'd call free. There don't seem to be bearings
> in the
>  wheels, and they are affixed to the axel in front of a spacer
> and with a
>  wassier and nut to hold the assembly together. I don't know
> whether to
>  grind off the ends of the spacers a little bit, grease the whole
> set-up, or
>  just wait and see if things get better with a little use. Any
> thoughts from
>  some of you folks?
>
>  If I should lubricate this, what would be a good product?
>
>  BTW, it's a nice cart, measures 24 x 48 with foot-high sides
> that can be
>  folded down. I even used it as a nice back-saving platform for
> grinding  down the two dogs' nails today, so I think it was a wise
> investment, even if
>  it isn't rolling so good right yet.
>
>  [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>

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