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A claw hammer. There isn't much you can't fix by beating on it or pulling it apart.
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Thanks Shaun! I typically take my control arms to a local shop for any press fit bushings but it would be nice to DIY.
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My Master Gardener wife has a LOT of flowers and plants. Always needs to prune limbs and cut something. She used hand operated pruning shears. If it was a tough plant, I was called to give it a hard squeeze. I teaser her about her weak hand strength.
For Christmas a few years ago I bought her a battery operated shear that she absolutely loved after using it the first time. After a couple of years of heavy use, it gave up the ghost, and it had some internal failure. She ordered a new pair that day. So even though I don't use it much at all, I would nominate the battery powered pruning shears as a favorite as she can whack through some pretty tough limbs. Crepe Myrtle limbs can get tough and she has to keep them cut back. She can play out there and I am not called on to trim something as often. I still have to dig holes, and remove some things that she does not want anymore. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1739888733.jpg |
If you are going to purchase that 20 Ton press (or the 12 Ton model) - you should be aware there are several modifications/enhancements for it covered over on the Garage Journal forum. Here's one thread to start:
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/modifications-to-the-hf-12-ton-and-20-ton-shop-press.349032/ |
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Sir Tools B 90 Master Kit http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1739891476.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1739891476.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1717886198.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1717886198.jpg |
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Costco reading glasses for me. I just cannot read the small print anymore!
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It's funny how much better the work is if I can actually see what I'm doing! |
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The only tool I hesitated to buy, but now just couldn't do without has to be my New Holland TC30 with its front end loader. It allows us to make hay, maintain fences, work fields and move snow.
I think I spend more time using it than any other tool on the place. Best Les |
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Fujifilm X-T1 IR full spectrum camera with full set of Kolari filters.
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This just about covers it for me:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1739918949.JPG |
^^^ that reminds me of my Grandpa's tool caddy. He was a carpenter and I think he had every tool that you show in it.
The planes and brace/bit aren't as popular now as they were then. |
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Brace and bit: the original cordless drill.
I never hesitated to buy tools I needed. I completed a lot of projects with hand tools when that was what I could afford, (including cutting about 20 2x10 floor joists with a Sandvik hand saw). Eventually I added the tools that made each job easier or faster. I suppose eventually I will sell off the planer and the bandsaw and the lathe and the rest of it. But for now, they are there when I need them. Best Les |
The only tool on that 'poster' that i don't own is the yankee screwdriver, and my compass saw and spokeshave are kind of garbage, so they don't really count.
I'm sure I'm not alone here. We 'older gentlemen of a certain mindset' tend to find value in uncommon objects. |
Back in my single days at my bachelor pad I needed to drill a hole up in my attic in the back of my house through the header of one wall to drop a phone line down there. This was in 1980 or so. No cordless equipment, and my extension cords were long enough to reach.
I whipped out my brace and drilled the hole in short order. I finally had a phone next to my bed, and no longer had to run to the hall in the middle of the house. Now my hand drill and brace hang on the wall next to my dwell meter and timing light. Not much use for them, but I never know when I might need them! |
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