rwest |
04-24-2025 05:00 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by ben parrish
(Post 12452655)
Borrowed a neighbors side grinder years ago to cut some manufactured stone around my fireplace to set a mantle. The amount of dust was epic; said side grinder ingested the dust in large gulps and it fried the motor. I went to Home Depot the next day and bought a new Dewalt grinder (bought myself one also) and took him the burnt out saw and the new one in the box. He protested saying the one I borrowed was on its last leg. I insisted on replacing it and he reluctantly accepted the new one. He later told me that, at the moment I gave him the new grinder, he knew what type of man, neighbor and friend I was. Another time, I borrowed his backhoe and the steering ram blew it’s seal and wouldn’t turn. I removed the ram and took it to a hydraulic shop and had it rebuilt. When I took the backhoe back, he noticed the new paint on the ram and just shook his head…said he had been nursing that seal for years with conditioner. I simply looked at it as the right thing to do…it worked when I got it and it had to work when I returned it.
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When I was 18, I had a room at a house in exchange for babysitting and general house upkeep. Our mower was at the shop, so I was sent to the neighbors to borrow their mower. Lady said it was very hard to start. I got it started with many pulls and mowed until I needed a break; came back and it wouldn’t start... now I couldn’t bring a broken mower back and I had a done a lot of work to my 914, so had some mechanical knowledge and went through the basics and put a new plug in. Bingo, that thing started easily and every time.
I was so proud of myself and was beaming when I brought it back to the lady and showed her how easy it started. She wasn’t thrilled as she said she didn’t have an excuse now for not mowing and leaving the work to her husband!
So no good deed sort of in the opposite for that woman.
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