T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
185.1 | Maybe that should be "favorite tules" | HANNAH::BECK | Paul Beck | Sat Aug 05 1995 16:42 | 3 |
| (P.S. ... it's "vise grips" and "baling wire" ... unless the
subjects are Heidi Fleiss and sometime to tie to the bucket you're
using to save your sinking boat...)
|
185.2 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 07 1995 11:23 | 13 |
|
The scary part is that I own every one of these, and have used them
in almost the exact circumstance mentioned. They left out two big
ones though.
1. Adjustable (crescent) wrench. Metric or standard, it doesn't
care. They can be used on anything from an alternator to the
two inch nuts on a tool bar.
2. Pliers. Give an ol' farm boy a pair of pliers and enough bailing
wire and he can fix d**n near anything ;^).
fred();
|
185.3 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 07 1995 12:06 | 9 |
| Oh, and another one:
3) Black plastic electrical tape: Will do anything duct tape and
plastic zip ties will, and some applications of baling wire.
Also makes a good heavy duty medical tape for the times you lose
a patch of skin to a slipping wrench or forget that hot metal
looks like cold metal.
fred();
|
185.4 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 07 1995 16:43 | 9 |
|
Shortly after one of my uncles got married, his wife decided that she
would spend more time with him by "helping" in the shop. Well,
apparently her "questions" and "suggestions" wore thin pretty fast.
So he sent her 15 miles into town to buy a left-handed screw driver.
She came back about an hour later ready to take the left-handed
ball-peen hammer to his head.
fred();
|
185.5 | | STRATA::WILBER | Build Castles in the Air | Wed Aug 09 1995 00:15 | 6 |
| I'm a duct-tape man, through and through. If it can't be fixed with
duct tape, why save it?
Alpha chips have been repaired by duct tape I hear.
jeff
|
185.6 | Sledges and a good chain saw | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Aug 10 1995 09:33 | 8 |
| Ten pound sledge hammars and chain saws are my favorite toys.:) I have
a ten pound sledge in the bottom of my truck for those hard to park
areas. Like when someone box's me in. And I cannot get my front bumper
out past theirs, cause they parked sooooo close.:) And if it is too big
of a job, I use the chain saw to cut off the bumper, or the corner of
the impolie parked car.:)
|
185.7 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu Aug 10 1995 11:45 | 7 |
|
Some other stuff that I have found to be invaluable is some epoxy
called "JB Weld". If this stuff won't stick it together, then
throw it away. Just the other day I had to glue the corner of my
car back on after some *&^% had chain-sawed it off ;^).
fred():
|
185.8 | couple more | POLAR::WILSONC | Desperately avoiding a career | Sun Aug 13 1995 03:06 | 4 |
| A couple more things that i've found useful:
Wire hanger
Toothpicks make good shims in a pinch
|
185.9 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 14 1995 11:50 | 10 |
| re .8
Toothpicks or wooden match sticks make good fix-its for stripped out
wood screws. Squirt in a little glue, insert toothpick, break it
off even with the top of the hole, then insert screw. Make sure
everything stays in place until the glue dries.
Paper-clips are another thing with 1001 uses.
fred();
|
185.10 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Mon Aug 14 1995 15:15 | 10 |
| What,
Nobody around here uses bungie cords? Work better than coathangers and
bailing wire for a lot of the same applications, and it is a
non-conductive material which can be important at times, as well.
Nonstick cooking spray works as well as other spray lubricants in a
pinch.
meg
|
185.11 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Aug 14 1995 16:14 | 6 |
| I like bungie cord! If yha own a pickup truck, there is enough cord to
drop your truck from a bridge and bounce back always tucked under the
front seat!:) Also pack fishing line. Have found some wild uses for
Spider Web.... sides fishing!:) 30 pounds of test on 2 pounds of line!!
Just doesnt get any better than this!!:)
|
185.12 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 14 1995 16:23 | 10 |
| Speaking of kitchen items:
Oven cleaner. Makes an excellent parts-cleaner. I'd recommend using
rubber gloves to handle the stuff, though, and don't wash it off on
the lawn. Some guy on tv the other night said it works good to take
graffiti off of brick/masonry too. It would probably take _all_ the
paint off of a painted surface. Haven't tried using it for paint
stripper, though.
fred();
|
185.13 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 14 1995 16:41 | 8 |
| And how could I forget:
Table knife: Letter opener, screw driver, lightweight pry-bar, (if
held by the blade) a lightweight bonking stick (see .0). Can even
be used to spread butter, jelly, or mayonnaise. About the only thing
it won't do is cut anything more substantial than warm butter.
fred();
|
185.14 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Tue Aug 15 1995 08:41 | 13 |
| I still have my "Shell (gas) Steak Knife" from the '60's in my tool
kit. Great for cutting hoses etc.
How about sheet rock screws and a cordless screw gun? How did the world
survive with our SR screws...?
Bungies, you ask? We have a $ 1, 2, 3 store in my town. Every time I go
there I buy a package of bungies (up to 4 - 12" for a buck).
But my flavorate tool have to be firewrench (actelene-oxygen cutting
torch)
Steve
|
185.15 | | STRATA::WILBER | Build Castles in the Air | Thu Aug 17 1995 04:56 | 6 |
| GAS steak knife? Does this thing have an internal combustion engine in
it???!!! I *like* it.
jeff
PS. Super glue too.
|
185.16 | lineman's sidecutters for me | STAR::ST_GEORGE | | Tue Aug 22 1995 10:41 | 2 |
| in my opinion the world's most versatile and important
handtool is a pair of 9" Klein Lineman's pliers.
|
185.17 | tools around the house | MTVIEW::JOHN | | Thu Feb 22 1996 13:44 | 11 |
| The tool I use the most is the shovel. I use it to dig holes in the yard for
the new plants.
Most usefull tools are
screwdriver
duct-tape
I just had a thought, I could have used duct-tape to fix the plumbing leak
instead of the goup.
Andrew
|
185.18 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 22 1996 15:20 | 1 |
| My snow blower... When it works...:)
|
185.19 | Hammer | PCBUOA::LPIERCE | Do the watermelon crawl | Thu Feb 22 1996 15:23 | 9 |
|
I never thought of a snow blower as a "tool". I think of it as
equipment :*)
My favorite: a Hammer. I love hanging pitchers, and I just came off a
summer of re-siding my house with red wood ceder - that hammer and me
became best friends.
|
185.20 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Feb 23 1996 09:02 | 4 |
| Guess it depends on where you live. For me, as a landlord,
quipment/tool, it becomes a blur.:)
|
185.21 | certainly versatile! | MKOTS3::DIONNE | | Fri Feb 23 1996 19:53 | 6 |
| <--- regarding the duct tape..
I once lived in a house (for 7 long years) where I patched many bare
spots, and edges of the kitchen linoleum with duct tape...
I even washed and waxed it, too...
|
185.22 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Mon Feb 26 1996 14:04 | 5 |
| Sheetrock screws, how did we live w/o them...?
My 12v DeWalt cordless drill/screwdriver
Compressed air
|
185.23 | | TALLIS::PARADIS | There's a feature in my soup! | Tue Feb 27 1996 16:09 | 14 |
| > Sheetrock screws, how did we live w/o them...?
Great stuff, but be careful... sheetrock screws are NOT designed to
withstand great loads. Do NOT use them to hold up anything that's
going to hold any significant amount of weight!
> My 12v DeWalt cordless drill/screwdriver
I got me one of those too... it's quickly become my favorite as well!
Then, of course, there's the ever present Vise-Grips[tm]
--jim
|
185.24 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Wed Feb 28 1996 07:47 | 12 |
| RE Vicegrips:
I bought some cheap Chinese welding vice clamps (like vice grips) as I
needed about 6 at a time some times. The other day, one opened and took
a chunk of a palm side finger joint between the lower handle and the
lower jaw. I am not sure if the Vice Grip version will do that, not
that I want to find out. I think that those Chinese clamps will get a
piece welded to them to act as a guard...
And let us not forget about ether (sp)...
Steve
|
185.25 | Miami Vice Clamps = handcuffs? | SMURF::PBECK | Rob Peter and pay *me*... | Wed Feb 28 1996 09:34 | 2 |
| I'm not sure I want to speculate about what "vice" [sic] grips or
clamps might be...
|