Evo160k. Thank you for taking the time to respond and post the pics. You did a beautiful job restoring your machine. Your video is perfect. Everyone takes pics of the front of machines but rarely the back. Mine was used as a display in a boutique in Vegas. I have to take a die grinder to some tack welds used to immobilize the machine and cross my fingers. At that point I can try to replace bolts on the back and see what moves when I turn it. If it doesn't fly apart, I'll try to disassemble and get the bead blaster to remove all the rattle can residue and determine parts needed.