Outlawmws
Well-known member
C'mon Lugz the Can gauge comments went on and on over several years!

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If you mean in the recent exchange, just me and Outlaw joking around with each other. If you mean the Great Gas Can Steel Gauge Debate, yes, several years ago. A Garage Sale thread classic. Ranks right up there with @BlueBomber 's nephew's estate sale driveway turd.did I miss something here?
Maybe they used it for salmon filets.That’s right, it’s an Alaskan!
@Private Lugnutz Just to give you a feeling warmer than a College Avenue sticky bun, I just got back from Lowes and they had their offering correctly marked as wrecking bars.Haha. Not General Dicktionary?!
Did you read the whole thread, though? What you have there is still properly called a gooseneck wrecking bar in some technical circles, including federal catalogs, whereas a long straight pry bar is still properly called a crowbar. Hand tool nomenclature, terminology, and colloquialisms is a fascinating hobby sub-topic.





Looks on the web that they were known mainly for hand-cranked ice cream freezers…very similar materials and finishes to this.Maybe they used it for salmon filets.
Not to get all nit picky but the “turdgate” was jakemac’s nephew. Haven’t seen that guy in here in a while .If you mean in the recent exchange, just me and Outlaw joking around with each other. If you mean the Great Gas Can Steel Gauge Debate, yes, several years ago. A Garage Sale thread classic. Ranks right up there with @BlueBomber 's nephew's estate sale driveway turd.
Maybe they used it for salmon filets.
I know it’s not quite in the spirit of the thread, but I think this post deserves a you ****.lol Post of the day If you ask me.So you don't see the irony of Hi-Jack comments Hi-jacking the thread...![]()







For two completely different tools? Read the link.And once a word is sufficiently in the vernacular, doesn’t it become proper? I/E Crowbar?
Valid point, Sir.And once a word is sufficiently in the vernacular, doesn’t it become proper? I/E Crowbar?
I don't know that it would be as high as 99%. If that were so, we'd have A LOT of people who actually wanted and needed a crowbar end up with a wrecking bar, and vice versa. At some point, the name really does matter, and it still matters to a lot more than 1% of the population using bars (road crews, forest service, etc). I will reiterate that you should read the thread I linked, and I guess I should emphasize - before this actually does turn into a great debate we will be talking about in the 20th annual thread in 2031, that I was having some fun with my friend, @misterbill , explicitly because it was the topic of a former vernacular vs nomenclature thread down on the VB. Hence the smiley devil emoticon and his witty touche back to me. In other words, he knows I was not genuinely admonishing him for using the "wrong" term on a garage sale thread. Despite learning - the hard way, from my father - that it is not a crowbar, even I would probably still call it a crowbar in certain circumstances. Such as shopping at that Lowes you cited where they don't know the difference!I’m just saying, if you showed everyone in America a wrecking bar, or a gooseneck bar, or a pry bar, and you asked them if any of these were a crowbar, 99% of them would say yes.
Until a dozen of the wrong bars show up at a jobsite. The work gang and the guy on the other end of the phone had better be using the same common vocabulary, especially when one term is the proper name for a completely different bar. No language in the world is as fluid as English, it's a beautiful thing, and I am a descriptivist by nature, but there are times when prescriptivism irrefutably matters. Tools are clearly one of them.If the majority of people use the word crowbar to mean any long piece of steel tooling with a curved end, and maybe not even with that modification, then that is the word in the common vocabulary.
...it means we should move on, but two other former hosts are guilty of continued sidetracking!Getting back on track:
Snerk. Cue the 'A crow walks into a bar' jokes...VS a Reckoning Bar. Where you buy everyone those beers you owe them (a day of reckoning).
Not a Crow Bar where birds drink.

There is way more of an overlap with a potential for massive confusion in the tools marketplace for all kinds of wrecking and pry bars between your polar esoteric RR and generic local ACE scenario. Again, our language is built for growing, but there is a time for the vernacular and there is a time for nomenclature and the decay and conflation is not always defensibly productive or desirable. This particular term is intriguing to me for just that reason and the thread I deep dove on is littered with rationale.Going down to the local ACE hardware and asking for a crowbar, you are most likely not going to get railroad working tools. Calling a specific tool house that specializes in RR tools would be a different story.
Now there is an Old Fashioned term that we have not screwed up yet.And, there was for a time a Crow Bar in my home town, which was were you went went you needed a screwdriver.





Thanks. Funny thing, when I put this copy on the shelf, I already had a hardcover and a paperback edition. Maybe I can use one as trade fodder for a copy of Outlaw Red, LOL.LS - Big Red book. Don't know if the edition is very valuable, but I sure loved that book when I was a kid!
At the risk of further offending everyone:, if you showed everyone in America a wrecking bar, or a gooseneck bar, or a pry bar, and you asked them if any of these were a crowbar, 99% of them would say yes.
You must've paid a daily rate, he still has life in him at the end my work day!I will kick a rented mule
As I said to OMR, who was the first to boldly throw out a 99% figure, I highly doubt it. The informal ratio on the original thread was something like 7/3. So I would probably take that bet!Even in a tool centric community such as Garage Journal, I think the vast majority of people will refer to that device as a Crowbar, and I would bet dollars to doughnuts that if you Quizzed the general tool section here that 99%+ would call the generic version found at your local ACE a crowbar. Thus using a specialized term obfuscates more than illuminates.

If only to satisfy my own curiosity and double-check myself and my own susceptibility to confirmational bias, I stopped by three hardware stores on my way home from JB MDL....Thus using a specialized term obfuscates more than illuminates.



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You're welcome. Every once in a rare while I contribute a little something in return for how much I have learned here from others, includng you.Thank you Lugz!