Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and the Yahoo Answers website is now in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.
?
Can I price my services as tax included?
I run a small business from home fixing garden equipment. To make pricing easier, i want to post all my services as tax included, so i can round them to the nearest dollar, and don t have to carry change. Can I do that, or do the customer receipts have display sales tax? I would still pay my state the gross receipts tax.
9 AnswersUnited States5 years agoJinma backhoe hydraulic problem?
I have a couple issues with a Jinma JW-03 backhoe attachment. I am having a problem with the dipper cylinder bleeding properly, or I think it may be a bleeding issue. Here is the scenario: I extend the boom horizontally level over a pit, and extend the dipper straight out. Then I bring the dipper down, and it drops quite fast (with the help of gravity), but, once the dipper is all the way down vertical, it stops, and takes awhile before continuing the rest of the travel. Once it finishes the travel, it pressures nicely and bogs the engine a bit. On swinging the dipper back to the away position, there is no lag, just smooth all the way. In other words, the problem only exists when the the cylinder itself is being extended. So I retract the cylinder all the way, resting the bucket on the floor so nothing will move. Unhook the line, pull the lever to run fluid through and into a bucket, insuring no air is present, use an oil can to squirt into the cylinder to make sure it's full (it's retracted, so there is only a little room in there anyway), stick in a new O ring and put it back together. Then, for good measure I extend the cylinder and repeat the process on the other line. But nothing changes. It's like when I am curling the dipper in, gravity is overtaking the flow of fluid, and maybe cavitating? No matter how many times I extend and retract the dipper all the way, even very slowly, the problem persists. Is it because I used a 7 gpm pump instead of the 4 gpm pump that came with it? Is it because it is sucking the fluid through the pump so quickly that it sucks air somehow?
I know it's not the valve block, because we switched the dipper with the bucket on the valve block and same thing. No problems with the bucket, though. We leave the filler cap off so we can watch the fluid rise and drop in the filler neck. I saw a modification which used a larger return line from the block to the reservoir to prevent the return fluid from shooting into the rest of the fluid, aerating it. Should I consider that?
Also, the 7 gpm pump I bought had 1/4 inch pipe fittings on it which didn't match the hoses on the backhoe, so instead of using a bunch of reducers, I simply took the fittings off the 4 gpm pump and used them. Should I put a restrictor in the fittings to the pump to take it back down to 1/4 inch?
So on the dipper, is it possible that there is fluid blowing by the piston in the cylinder and therefore has to re-pressurize? Should I go ahead and disassemble the cylinder, and find a rebuild kit, in case it is a seal in there that flipped or tore?
Sorry this is so long, but I didn't want to leave you with more questions than answerers. Too many times in the forums I see questions without enough facts to form a solution. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
3 AnswersMaintenance & Repairs1 decade agoanyone know what Schweinsohr beans are?
In Argentina we grew and ate a bean called Schweinsohr, or Schweinohr by the German community, it is a large bean shaped like a pig's ear, (hence the name, translated "pig's ear beans") These beans were especially good in salads. I'm hoping someone will recognize the term, and maybe know of a common name for them. If the question seems strange, yes a lot of German folk live in Argentina, and keep the language.
2 AnswersEthnic Cuisine1 decade agoHow do I get mud out of a well?
I have a 100 foot well with a submersible pump, and the bottom has filled up with mud up to the pump, almost up to the screen. The water comes out dirty, so i need to clean the mud out of the bottom of the casting. The casting is a 5 inch PVC. So far I am trying by putting 2 inch PVC pipe down the well, and attaching it to a 3 inch diaphragm pump, but I keep losing my prime, or maybe the pump can't draw from that deep (the water table is around 40 feet). I even tried filling the two sections of 3 inch suction hose that lead from the well to the pump with water, but as soon as that runs out, that's all I get. Is there a better way to get the mud out?
The reason I used the 2 inch PVC down the well, and the 3 inch pump is to reduce the volume of water being drawn, and hopefully be able to draw deeper than the pump is rated for. Any smaller of a pipe, and i'm afraid the pump might have a hard time working againt itself.
7 AnswersDo It Yourself (DIY)1 decade ago