Beerhippie
Well-known member
I have the Fenix HM65R. Same light without the red bulb. Probably the best headlamp I've ever owned--and I've been buying and using headlamps sine the '70s.
I have the Fenix HM65R. Same light without the red bulb. Probably the best headlamp I've ever owned--and I've been buying and using headlamps sine the '70s.





Thanks.Best of luck on your recovery @willf650
Wishing you a speedy recoveryWell been down and out for the past week due to a hip replacement. That **** is painful and you take walking for granted.
Been messing with RC cars and walking up and down my culdisac every hour so I bought some RC related ****.
A regular set of Eklind precision hex drivers.
During Prime Days, which sucked this year, I bought a Amazon brand power screwdriver
I've seen these workpro pliers posted so I bought a set. I wouldn't recommend them. Although they seem decent they truly are toy or key chained size. These are getting chucked in the RC car box for some use at times.
For size reference
And finally some real items for real use. I got a set of EZ Red magnetic spray can holders and some cheap cordless tool mounts to screw the bottom of the shelf above one of my work benches. Face them one way they fit Milwaukee and turn them 180 degrees and they fit DeWalt.
Hoping my leg pain starts subsiding in week 2 so I can hobble around my shop and at least organize.
Well been down and out for the past week due to a hip replacement. That **** is painful and you take walking for granted.
I had one knee replaced 13 months and the other 5 months ago. I did the exact same thing with the timer, not only for the initial recovery, but, also later to do the physical work around my property. The timer stops resting too much, but, also stopped me from overdoing things too early.I'm 12 weeks into the new hip thing. The first week is the roughest, by far. Don't let it get you down, just keep walking and exercising as much as you can. Sitting still was the worst thing, just made me stiff and painful. After a few days I had an idea - every time I sat down I set a timer for 30 minutes. When it went off, I'd get up and hobble around the house for a few laps. Movement makes a real difference.
Wishing you a rapid and complete recovery!

A little update...with a picture of it home.

I use the heck outta those little visegrips
I picked up a regular set of 4" Vice Grips at a hardware store in Sants Claus, Indiana a couple of years ago.I use the heck outta those little visegrips
I use my little curved jaw ones when I work on our old Jeep Liberty on the hood Shock. They are old and worn out and Ive been hit with a falling hood more than once, so now I clamp them around the shock to protect my noggin.I picked up a regular set of 4" Vice Grips at a hardware store in Sants Claus, Indiana a couple of years ago.
You don't need these little guys all the time but when you have and need them, worth their cost.
Friend of mine had his replaced a couple of years ago and was back riding a bike on the road within a couple of months and was back to mountain biking the next summer.Thanks.
Want to get back to dirt biking and mountain biking and that’s my goal. If the hip works out I’ll be kicking up dust in a few months. Early stages are just more painful than I was hoping.
I've had that saw for a while now. Used it a couple times.


I’ll be interested in how that compressor works for youLast Sunday I ordered struts and shocks for the masters subi. All these years I’ve always used the style spring compressor that ubolts to the spring and that has large acme bolts for compression.
I always wanted a real strut/spring compressor tool but those are stupid money for something I might do every couple of years. But I went looking anyhow and came across this for a hundred bucks.
I gotta admit, it’s pretty darn stout and it got here in like three days.
Now if only my wife’s subi parts would come in. Or maybe if they’d just respond to multiple emails and phone calls. Right now it’s looking like I got taken. I’ll be talking to the credit card company tomorrow about a charge back![]()
If he doesn't post again, it didn't work well.I’ll be interested in how that compressor works for you
Ya I was really looking forwards to using it this weekend. The wife’s been in holland and wasn’t coming home till Wednesday. When I get her subi parts I’m gonna have to listen too “is it done yet”….”whatta about now”…..”you said it’d just be a couple hours”….blah blah blah blah !I’ll be interested in how that compressor works for you
If he doesn't post again, it didn't work well.

So she'll go from Holland to Hollerin'? Got it. If a chunk of iron takes you out, it'll be a saucepan instead of the strut compressor...Ya I was really looking forwards to using it this weekend. The wife’s been in holland and wasn’t coming home till Wednesday. When I get her subi parts I’m gonna have to listen too “is it done yet”….”whatta about now”…..”you said it’d just be a couple hours”….blah blah blah blah !
Pffftt… like it’ll be the first time I got hit in the head with a high velocity chunk of steel![]()



Had a tamarind Jarritos yesterday. Sad to say it was in a plastic bottle, still cane sugar tho.Oh yeah, Jarritos brand soda, coming in many colorful, fruity flavors, found not just in Mexican markets but Wal-Mart, some hardware stores, convenience stores. Made in Mexico, glass bottle, and I'm assuming cane sugar.
And I just want to say again that a Knipex Cobra removes bottle caps just fine, too.![]()
Nice to have appreciative friends
Giant has the glass bottle versions, at least in my city, and I believe Walmart has the glass versions as well.Had a tamarind Jarritos yesterday. Sad to say it was in a plastic bottle, still cane sugar tho.
Giant has the glass bottle versions, at least in my city, and I believe Walmart has the glass versions as well.
Nice to have appreciative friends
If he doesn't post again, it didn't work well.
Yes, they are. You'll very rarely see a professional arborist using anything but Felco for hand shears.Felco 8 pruning shears. I'd been looking for a good pair of pruning shears for a long time, and I think these are the best.
I bought the Fenix lights specifically because they use replaceable rechargeable batteries. No need to wait for the battery to charge when you need a light--just swap out for a fully charged one. I was pleased to find that the HM65A will work with flat-top CR18650 cells that I salvage from "dead" battery packs.I have a pair of very similar Fenix headlamp that is USB-c rechargable that i have been using over the last year for auto and home work. I got one without the over the head strap since I often wear it over a baseball cap


Not that I NEED more hammers, but I couldn't resist this - particularly when Menard's had them @ $16.84 (before the 11% rebate). 24 Oz. Made in USA.
Had this dropped off from the Bezos bus:
I liked the 10" version so I ordered the 12" in advance of some plumbing work. Honestly, these are smoother than the Icon version. Yes - made in China, but Great Star did a very good job with these and they open to 2-1/2". Not bad for $26.99. The Knipex are 3X the price, but for me, this will do in a pinch.
The replacement Buck 110 is sturdy, but hard to get out quickly while in a dark parking lot,