[Farmall] Another O-12 project, part 5
farmallgray at aol.com
farmallgray at aol.com
Mon Feb 23 07:38:23 PST 2009
Karl,
6.00-16 is still a good size for tires. As Jim mentioned the rib implement would be your best bet.
Tri- ribs didn't come out till the mid to late 40s.
Todd Markle
Spring Mills, Pa.
-----Original Message-----
From: Karl Olmstead <kolmstead4 at msn.com>
To: Farmall List <farmall at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Sun, 22 Feb 2009 8:54 pm
Subject: [Farmall] Another O-12 project, part 5
Spent hours and hours sandblasting today. Still lots of parts to go. Nowhere
near painting yet.
Drilled out one broken bolt in the top radiator tank. I finally got one right.
Never even nicked the original threads, and the drilled-out bolt came out as a
little coil.
This particular O-12 has the screwed-on aluminum McCormick-Deering medallion on
the radiator top tank, and both screws were stuck tight. I thought about
grinding the screw heads off in order to get the medallion off, but then I
decided to try heat. I knew that I couldn't use a torch on the heads of the
screws; the flame would melt the thin aluminum medallion almost instantly. So I
heated up the bulges inside the radiator top tank, the extra material added so
that the screw holes wouldn't penetrate the cooling system. Had to spread the
heat out; too dangerous to heat just a small spot on a casting. To my
amazement, the stuck medallion screws came loose easily after heating the top
tank. There's no doubt in my mind; heat is enormously more effective than any
penetrating oil. Just for fun, I heated up the nut on the radiator cap. It,
too, unscrewed easily.
I did set up an electrolysis system. In keeping with my philosophy that
'anything worth doing is worth doing to wretched excess', I souped up the
electrolysis process a bit. I used a fairly large plastic tub and the first
part to go in was the top radiator tank. In order to make the water more
conductive (and get those electrons flowing), I dumped a can of lye in the
solution. This does two things. Sodium hydroxide makes a fine electrolyte, and
it also chews off any grease or paint left on the parts. Good chance to use my
new battery charger. Jacked up the voltage until I the meter was showing ten or
fifteen amps of current. That'll reduce some rust! Should be done tomorrow.
No point in starting to paint until I'm done electrolyzing and sandblasting.
Quicker and cheaper to do the painting all in one batch. To my surprise, this
tractor seems to have b
een red right from the factory. I'd been expecting to
see gray paint, but all I found was two coats of red; a decent layer of original
paint, and a really cheap, faded topcoat. Serial number makes it a mid to late
1936 tractor; well before the official changeover.
The reason I'm sure it was red is that the front axles, inside the front hubs
are red. The tractor desperately needed new front tires; I'd been stalling on
pulling the front wheels because the O-12 doesn't have rims. Pulling the wheels
means messing with the front wheel bearings. I hate wallowing in 70 year old
wheel bearing grease! And now I have to find new seals. After pulling the
front hubs and driving out the bearing races, I used my backhoe to break the
tire beads loose from the wheels. I'll haul them into town tomorrow and get the
tires taken off. Then the wheels go on the pile of parts needing cleanup,
sandblasting and painting. Need to look up what 6.00 x 16 equates to in a
modern tire. Wonder what kind of tread the O-12 front tires originally had.
Two or three ribs? All I ever see on them is old, bald car or truck tires.
Nowhere near the 'golden moment of turnaround' yet. Parts are still coming off;
nothing is going back on. And this isn't a full restoration, just a preliminary
fixup in order to create a useful tractor. Full five-day workweek coming up; I
won't be reporting in for a while.
Thanks for all the comments and suggestions!
-Karl
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