No...those are comedic master pieces that will only be marginalized by those without your touch....and a case of 5 hour drinksOriginally Posted by David Love AI27
No...those are comedic master pieces that will only be marginalized by those without your touch....and a case of 5 hour drinksOriginally Posted by David Love AI27
This absolutely needs to happen. We will supply the video camera! :lol:Originally Posted by AllZWay
Sam's suggestion: Have other people pretend to be the posters.
Ex: Frank as MFW and Randy as Glenn
~Darcie
Oh gosh...."Battery Boxes" went from zero to 9 pages with 122 replies and 1336 views since April 17th.
I don't have all nite...dare I read it all?
Can someone give me the Reader's Digest condensed version? :lol:
Nevermind....I got sucked in and read it all and now have reader's remorse.
Some interesting perspectives...
-=- Todd
I don't know what constitutes firewall material around here, but for structural steel welding, AWS D1.3 sheet metal code states:Originally Posted by David Love AI27Thicker materials fall into the D1.1 structural steel code, commonly considered 'plate' steel.This welding code covers arc welding of structural sheet/strip steels, including cold formed members (hereafter collectively referred to as sheet steel) which are equal to or less than 3/16 in. (0.188 in. / 4.8 mm) in nominal thickness.
On top of looking highly suspicious for 'free' ballast, 1/4" or greater firewall would be kind of a pain to weld to the factory steel.
Jared
HPDE goon, '12 rookie?
I believe the topic is battery boxes and fire walls... don't recall ANY comments concerning "ballast"... that would be another topic all together...Originally Posted by Jrod
I suppose I was responding more to the 'don't use plate for a firewall' comment than your post. There seemed to be some discussion about the legality of excessively thick boxes earlier; I only intended to add a data point for material selection.
Jared
HPDE goon, '12 rookie?
Ok.. well that is different... LOLOriginally Posted by Jrod
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