What did you do today instead of working on your Mustang?

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Dragged this home last night and then spend $40 blasting off the years of nastiness. 1972 Country Sedan 400-2V, C6, tilt, air, dual facing rear seat, power locks. Very rust free, but like many southwestern cars, the interior is well worn. I jokingly told my daughter it'd be her first car, now she's all about it.

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Wow, a good wash down did wonders for her, she looks like a different wagon.
 
Aside from waiting for the county to approve my garage plan, I picked up a 91 Dana 60 kingpin axle and a sterling 10.5 rear for my 81 F350. This will be one of my future projects after my garage is finished.
 

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I met my son for an hour over lunch shooting handguns. Mine a Dan Wesson 1911 45 ACP his a S&W Shield 9MM. We both enjoyed the time. Likely to become weekly.
 
Erected a new Rhino Shelter hoop house as temporary winter storage and work space for the Galaxie sportsroof. It won't fit in my garage, so I have to make do until we get a design locked down and approved by the town for the addition. I recreated the plywood floor that I used in my other hoop house, which keeps the interior of that one perfectly dry and eliminates the moisture problems they usually have. 5/4x6 PT deck boards as a perimeter, and then across the width every 4 feet, 10mil vapor barrier and 1/2" exterior rated sheathing ply screwed to the 5/4 boards. Painted the ply on both sides to protect it from moisture, so it should last a long time. The unpainted ply in my other shelter is ten years old and just starting to fail. Have a string of Amazon-sourced construction lights which make it nice to work in.

The big mistake I made was getting a round top style, thinking it would shed snow more easily. Should have bought the same house style as my other one. I'm losing way too much interior space. If it irritates me enough, I'll get another shelter and move this one elsewhere.

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Erected a new Rhino Shelter hoop house as temporary winter storage and work space for the Galaxie sportsroof. It won't fit in my garage, so I have to make do until we get a design locked down and approved by the town for the addition. I recreated the plywood floor that I used in my other hoop house, which keeps the interior of that one perfectly dry and eliminates the moisture problems they usually have. 5/4x6 PT deck boards as a perimeter, and then across the width every 4 feet, 10mil vapor barrier and 1/2" exterior rated sheathing ply screwed to the 5/4 boards. Painted the ply on both sides to protect it from moisture, so it should last a long time. The unpainted ply in my other shelter is ten years old and just starting to fail. Have a string of Amazon-sourced construction lights which make it nice to work in.

The big mistake I made was getting a round top style, thinking it would shed snow more easily. Should have bought the same house style as my other one. I'm losing way too much interior space. If it irritates me enough, I'll get another shelter and move this one elsewhere.

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That's very nice. How long is the cover expected to last?
 
That's very nice. How long is the cover expected to last?

They have a two year warranty, but the other one I have is eleven years old and still doing fine. I'm certain it wouldn't last nearly as long in Texas. I've seen where people will put another tarp over the top as a sacrificial layer.
 
They have a two year warranty, but the other one I have is eleven years old and still doing fine. I'm certain it wouldn't last nearly as long in Texas. I've seen where people will put another tarp over the top as a sacrificial layer.
I put one of those up in my buddies back yard. He was letting me store my bass boat. In Phoenix, we get these microburst storms....A fairly strong one came along and that thing ended up on the neighbor's roof! It used corkscrew anchors and turnbuckles to cinch it down. It looked like a couple of the turnbuckles loosened and unhooked themselves and that's when the party started! What you've got looks better made that what I had...mind came from Sam's Club or Costco....
 
My first one was the low-line Shelter Logic "Garage in a Box" from Tractor Supply and that lasted for a couple years until we had a blizzard that dumped 24" on us. It was my fault, as I fell asleep during the storm and woke up too late to save it. I was able to straighten it out and used it until I bought a good Rhino Shelter the following spring.

The anchors these come with is a driven anchor with a cable. You drive them into the ground as far as they'll go, then pull up on the cable and they rotate 90°. There is zero chance of getting those screw type anchors into the roots and rocks of CT.

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