Taste the nostalgic sensation and stretch the sheet metal into an elongated plate shape. Length and thickness are better than cheats. Hardness is done with bespoke models.
The first bottle can be quickly raised because it merely stretches the steel. I prepared the stretched one in the same way, because I needed about seven pieces around one spring to change the length. Only the longest one round both ends and shaped like a small cylinder attached.
If I were to make a knife, I would make the shape as it is, but today I would do a process of baking it as it was before it became this knife. With that said, even in the previous world, are truck board springs just right for sharpening them out of there and turning them into knives?
Now I make plate springs out of knife ingredients on the contrary. Kind of funny to think so.
It was just a bit of finishing to stretch the sheet metal, so I quickly finished the work, but I used to take some time in prototyping the front wheel part, and this will be a time-up on this day. I'll see you tomorrow for fine parts and assemblies.
The next morning, when I was pumping water, I decided to try a mini luggage truck for the prototype. Cover the water bottle with a lid and secure it to the mini luggage car with rope. This is also a brief reproduction of the usage of luggage vehicles when transporting goods. I did the experiment yesterday, but now I can be sure that if there is no problem, there is no problem.
Krull was still waiting just outside the house this morning. Build a rope to pull a mini luggage car on the Krull.
"Don't ask for this today.
"Krull."
Krull starts walking with me as he pulls the galagoro and the mini luggage truck. The contents are empty water bottles but weigh more than empty barrels. It's pretty stable, and it doesn't get unstable except it rocks with guttan sometimes.
The Krull is not particularly likely to be towed either, so we shall decide that there is no problem for now. The real deal is to put a bottle of water in it.
Fill the water bottle about the lake. When placed on a mini luggage truck, it sinks heavily into the boulder. Because it weighs a lot......
Put a lid on the water bottle and tangle the rope around the neck area to secure it to the luggage. Come on, how about this.
In conclusion, the mini luggage truck itself could normally succeed. I don't leak water because I have a lid and it's fixed with rope, and it's normal not to fall, but it shakes pretty little. I can expect the same effect if I put it on my luggage.
The only thing that failed was that the Krull seemed a little boring. Thanks. She wants to carry it herself instead of a luggage truck or something in the morning water draw.
I smiled bitterly and promised to let Krull carry me from tomorrow.
When I'm done with all my morning routines, my job today is to make parts. Like and the others make short sorts and long swords in work-sharing today.
The parts to be made today are the ones that hold the spring together, the ones that secure the spring to the luggage, the wheels, axles, and thin plates to reinforce the trolley by the way. With reference to the mini luggage car, the size to be attached to the actual luggage car will be made with cheats.
If it hadn't been for this cheat, I'd have measured the dimensions and made it... or something, but that's cheat there. The parts that secure the spring to the luggage car can be complex shapes there, but the correct shapes can be created in one shot with the correct dimensions.
If only I knew how it works, I might be able to build an early automobile. But I'm not going to make anything like that at the moment. I just want to make something as good as possible to suit this world.
Next to the smoothly flowing, shared flow work, we create butterflies and one-off parts. The sight of its true opposite even looks a little odd. The whole set of parts was complete, and I said, "Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.