Good God!

How much does this little wagon weight that you would need a jack?

When you say a lock nut is it the sort with a capped end or is the end open 
(with a plastic insert) in the open end?

If the latter then just back it off a half turn or less, it won't spin off, 
particularly if there is a washer between it and the wheel.

If only the front wheels aren't turning then leave the others alone.

Get them turning fairly easily before lubricating though, lubrication isn't a 
substitute for appropriate adjustment.



  ----- 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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