Question by midnight_sky01: do you think this is a good start for a story?
I leaned heavily against the U-Haul moving van and rubbed my sore arms. Every muscle in my body ached from straining to lift heavy objects. The boxes seemed to go on forever, getting bigger and heavier with each one. Finally, a voice came from inside the van. “Last one!” it was my uncle Jesse. He’d come over to help my mother and I unload the van at our new house. He headed for the steps. I caught a glimpse of the label as he opened the front door. it said, ‘Rachel’s Breakables’ in artsy block letters. I called a warning to my uncle before the screen door slammed shut.

Fidgeting with the hem of my shirt, I looked around at my new setting. We had neighbors on both sides, one secluded by trees with a wide trail cut about fifty feet from the road. I figured it used to be an old driveway or something. I could see three cats on the front porch and a small pick-up parked in front of the mobile home. On the other side of our house was a shabby-looking trailer with a broken window. There were dents all along the side I could see. A blue motorcycle was leaned against it. The shed in the back yard was caving in on itself. there was hardly any grass, and the red mud had tire tracks and deep ruts.

Alabama red clay, I thought bitterly. Alabama was so different from Louisiana. Back home in Hebert, there was nothing but swamp, gators, and flatlands. I stopped fidgeting and tightly balled one fist. You’re not in Hebert anymore, Rachel. Fayette is your home now. I chided myself for the hundredth time that evening. No point in whining about it. you’re here now and you aren’t going back any time soon. It had taken nearly six and a half hours to drive the U-Haul from Hebert to Fayette. With only one rest stop in the 352 miles. The air conditioner was broken, too. Driving for that long with no AC, aty the beginning of June… lets just say I was in no hurry to do it again.

There are some typos in here, i know. but please give me some comments!
I’m sixteen, and so is Rachel. welcome criticism. Make me a better writer!
I really appreciate your comments. I’m going to post this on Wattpad.com or maybe worthyofpublishing.com, if you want to continue reading. I’m HootieBug on wattpad. the story will be under Broken once i get it up and out.

http://www.wattpad.com/user/HootieBug

Best answer:

Answer by Udontneedtoknow Lolz
i think its a great start to a story. it feels like you actually did what you wrote about. there are a lot of details, which is good, but yes there are some typos. just keep going with it, i would love to hear more. :)

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Question by Ghghdhgfh F: who is good at bike and bicycles part or engineering? please make me a easy summary about this?
im making a mini bike, so this is what it says:

We suggest framing the mini bike from 1″ tubing. You could certainly use common 3/4-in. pipe if you were so inclined. If you don’t have a tube bender, you could join straight lengths with angle iron. But make sure the joints are reinforced since the frame will suffer severe stresses from jolting over rough terrain.

Formed channel or a custom solution is needed for the frame base and transmission rack and steel plate for the engine deck. For the axles, we don’t recommend threaded axles if you intend use on rocky terrain by scraping past stones. Instead they can be retained with cotter pins and washers.

The uprights of the front fork section are also 1-in. furniture tubing or 3/4-in. pipe. The cross members, including the two pivot brackets, are angle iron. These are spaced so that the frame’s steering column will seat snugly between them. The lock pin is then dropped through. This pin is 5/8-in.-dia. rod, with an L of 1/4-in. rod welded at the top. This hooks over the upper pivot bracket to keep the pin from dropping through to the ground. It also provides a handle to facilitate withdrawal, once the cotter pin at the opposite end has been removed. Unless you can lap this pin into the frame column for a snug fit, it should ride within bushings pressed into both ends of the column pipe. In the model shown, 5/8-in. I.D. bushings were used.

As we said, if you’re going to do some heavy duty off road driving, you may be happy down the line if you don’t use threaded axles. Or, if you do, use bushings to ensure that no thread is exposed when the wheels are secured.

But you can also use special pivoting retainers and forgo the threads. Make your own retainers by welding an L-shape of 1/4-in. rod to one face of a washer large enough to slip onto the axle you’ve chosen. The tail of the L enters a hole in the plate, holding the axle in place in the notch. (The hub nut shown on the front axle is an alternate treatment.)

The defining feature of this design is the enormous rear wheel. The 12-by-16 ATV type has no tube and is kept at only 12 lbs. pressure. At such low pressure, the tire can cups itself around small boulders and logs in the path, smoothing your ride. Also, with the design’s 8″ ground clearance, you won’t get stopped by small obstructions nearly as often.

With such a large and low pressure tire, it’s virtually impossible to spin out loose soil or mud, or on ice. It floats along on top of sand, making this trail-blazer a practical beach buggy as well.

The design calls for a 6-by-6 snow-and-mud tread tire on the front; you keep its tube at 15-20 lbs. pressure.

Check your parts supplier for what they offer, and their selection of material for the wheels (aluminum or steel)

Most commonly people use tiller engines for the power plant on these little machines. They should be horizontal mount. You’ll need a centrifugal clutch if the motor you find isn’t already equipped with one.

The scooter we’ve shown uses a four-cycle engine. You’ll want an engine-to-wheel ratio of 25-30 to 1. This will depend on your clutch size, are they come in a variety of tooth sizes. We’ll be publishing a gear ratio chart to help with this selection.

Cut Off Switch
Keep in mind that this rig is really a two-wheel tractor. If you start it up with the throttle advanced, it’ll take off instantly—with grim determination, and a mind of its own.

So it’s a good idea to have an emergency switch within easy reach—perhaps a hand-held, spring-loaded cut off switch which will stop the engine the moment you release your grip.

You could part the condenser wire and insert a pushbutton switch, mounting it on the handlebar so you can keep your finger on the button while you steer. If the button is released, it breaks the ignition circuit.

Or, you might use a hand-throttle with a sufficiently powerful return spring to starve the carburetor when released.

Braking
Engine compression supplies adequate braking, but it’s a good idea to equip the rear wheel with a brake drum so you can install the pedal brake shown

Extras
Remember also that it’s no trick to make the shafts on the idler pulleys long enough to use them as power take-offs for a water pump or generator. So if anybody shouts “Get a horse!” at you when you chug past them on the trail, you can grin smugly. What pack animal can double as a pumping station or camp-site power house? And this mount is cheap to feed. With the 2-1/2-hp engine shown, a gallon of gas should scoot you through the wilds for nearly six hours.

The design uses a swing arm that connects to the jack shafts between the engine and the rear wheel. This arm allows you to change the gearing on the step pulley. The spring keeps the arm taught, so your belt doesn’t slip off.

The transmission rack consists of two channel uprights with bearing housings welded at both ends. These housings are merely short lengths of pipe wi

Best answer:

Answer by mr_d150
It’s about as summarized as it can be and not lose information though I think it’s a bit short on that too.

But in my honest opinion, you’d be better off looking at scooters from Northern Tool and Equipment

http://www.northerntool.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/category_6970_291701+771296

Or from a regular motor scooter dealer. Trying to build your own scooter without the proper tools and skills can be deadly.

Budd

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Question by : How much Hp does my truck produce and is this combo good?
I have a 1966 Ford Bronco. It has a 7” Lift, 3 speed trany, 4:11 gearing, 31” mud tires (Getting 38” or 44” soon), V8 351 Clevelend, holy four barrel carb with dual glaspacks (Getting FLowmasters). How musch HP does this combo produce? ive heard 221hp, 400hp, buti woul like to hear 1500hp but that may be a streatch. if it matters i am gona be running 93 octane in it or using octane boost

Best answer:

Answer by Uncle Bo
351 Cleveland engines put out about 250-280 HP depending on build and tune. If your engine is fresh and was professionally built, over 300HP is possible.

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Question by Rusty Keg: Good tires for a 09 Silverado 3500HD?
Ok, i have a 09 Silverado 3500HD. Its a 4wd. It has the stock 16 inch rims. Its a plow truck also. I have Transforce HT’s but they ware to fast, their bald at 30,000 miles…

I want something good in snow for sure, and something that can handle weight too, because i use it for my landscaping business…

I also wouldn’t mind somewhat aggressive tread so i could play in the mud a little, and or not worry about getting stuck…

Any suggestions, and a rough price estimate per tire if possible…

Best answer:

Answer by Gophuk Yerselv
Put BFG A/T KO on it.

Get the load range E tires.

Gonna run you around 230 ish per tire, but they’re the best bang for the buck for what you want.

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