99 Denali

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Jim
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Man! You're a man on fire now! Seems like you're making great progress. Think it'll be running by next weekend?

Be ready this weekend. As soon as I get the fuel rail fittings it'll get fired. Picture as promised.

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And as far as "man on fire", I really don't want to go thru that again. Next time I'm just gonna lay down and just burn. Nobody should have to go thru the scrub downs and therapy. Man, that sucked.

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Tonyrodz

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Damn man! I'm sorry. I hope you don't have any ill or long lasting problems. I've heard about those scrub Downs. If I remember correctly has something to do with scarring and infections? At least you're back doing what you enjoy! I'm glad you're OK.
 
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Thanks brother. Yeah, I'm good. Lucky really. Didn't have a good chance of surviving but I proved the doctors wrong. I was airlifted to burn unit and another guy got there right before me, he was John Doe and I was Xavier Doe. We were both close to 40% burnt, he was in a meth lab explosion and only made it 3 days. I was in ice tub for 5 days trying to get my core temp down. They wouldn't even attempt skin graphs until temp came down and appeared I would live. Scrub downs were to remove dead skin cells and fight off infection. They would come into my room in ICU and wheel me down to this room with 2 stainless tables in it. The side of the table would fold down and they would strip me and slide me onto the table. Cut off all the bandages and rinse me down with some cold ass water, I would ***** at them, and then take what felt like plastic scrub brushes and start going to town on the burns. It was horrible. The days I didn't pass out it was like I was numb or in a trance. Wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy. After ICU I was in step down unit and I gotta say, it tore me up seeing these kids in there just knowing what they were going thru and hearing them screaming during their treatment. Spent a lot of time talking with the kids and their parents. I joined a support group called SOAR, survivors offering assistance in recovery, did that for about a year but just seeing new faces and hearing new stories I couldn't do it anymore. Needless to say, my wife was 6 months pregnant with our first when this happened and wasn't working. I was told I couldn't go back to swinging wrenches for a living. This happened January, I was out of hospital in beginning of March against my doctors orders and was back to working on tractor trailers and tug boats in April. Had full thickness skin graphs on my hands so I was working in compression garments, no hair on the front of my head and the cartilage sticking out the tops of my ears. Did that for another 16 months to put food on the table and then had to give it up. I was developing keloids (blister/calluse like lumps) on my hands so I gave it up and got into the steel workers union. No lasting effects other than scars and my pinky on my left hand is contracted from burning into the tendon. Therapy couldn't get it back. We tried.
All that said, this is why I do this kinda stuff. I miss wrenching for a living so I'm always tinkering with my rigs to give me some sort of satisfaction. It's also nice having 18 years of buying tools come home to the garage.

But enough about me. I'm so close on this Denali I can almost taste it. I'll update 2mrw with pics, gotta get to bed to do the pinewood derby in the morning.
 
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Tonyrodz

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You came through like a champ! God bless you brother. Doesn't really matter what doctor's prognosis is, all comes down to the will of the individual. Seems like a strong willed person has a much better chance then someone who just gives up. Plus you had a new baby and wife to take care of, so you didn't have time to slack off! Gotta take care of the family, and I bet that was 90% of your motivation. At least you're still able to do what you love, you have all your limbs, brain cells and family. That's a win in my book!! Now let's go and get that ***** running!! :cheers::waytogo:
 
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Thanks, that really means a lot. I think besides will to live, I was in pretty good shape then. Who really knows, but I did beat the odds. New aspect on life for sure.
 
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I'm gonna put a video together on this thing. I'm out of memory on my phone and I have to download a bunch of videos of the pinewood derby anyway. Give me a little time and I'll show everything that was done and how. I'm about at the point of starting it but I have a few issues that I'll explain in video.
 
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Sounds like a plan man! Hope your son wins. :waytogo::driver:

I took the video and then started uploading them to YouTube. Was taking forever. All the derby videos loaded but my truck video said it had an hour and 20 min left so I went to bed. When I got up the damn computer did an update which stopped the video upload. Figures. I'll get it started again in the morning and hopefully won't take hours to load. As far as the pinewood derby goes, we smoked everyone. At first these cars were running 180-198 MPH. The top one was 202 MPH. That was the defending champion for the last 3 years running. This was my sons and I first time in this derby so I was thinking we might not take it but our first run we did a 205.6 MPH run!! We ran 11 times and our slowest was 203.8 MPH. Easily won in his division and went on to win the grand finals. Then they had what's called a renegade race, it was the scout leader's cars that they built. The head guy had this aluminum car with skinny wheels, which aren't BSA approved but he said there's no rules for renegade besides weight. His car was running 207-209 MPH. At that point my daughter was way overdue for a nap so we were leaving but they wanted Josh to stay with his car and race the renegade race. His mom said she would bring him home after so I let him stay. He beat the scout leaders car with a 208.6 MPH!! Wish I was there to see it. The guy was mad so he tweaked his car somehow, all I know is Josh told me he adjusted his wheels or something and then did a rematch and beat us by 1 MPH. He told Josh that he hopes his dad will let him in on his secrets. Hahaha. That was the highlight of my weekend. The smile on Josh's face was worth all the effort I put in on that car. Sucked because he only got a certificate and some survival gift but no trophy. This was the first year they didn't do trophies. I told Josh I will buy him a trophy because he did help with the car and he deserves it.

This was the 7th run. 206.7MPH. Now I'm not sure they actually run 200MPH but maybe it's a scaled speed? Either way we were all on the same scale. Josh named his car Ronin after some video game or something. The kids were chanting "Ronin Ronin Ronin". Haha. The look on Josh's face was priceless.

 
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Finally, took forever to download. I didn't have time to babysit computer while it loaded and whenever I left it something would happen. At any rate, here it is. And I did mis speak, return line comes off drivers side fuel rail to regulator, not passenger side.

 

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