I have the older version of the larger ryobi, no complaints. I probably use the high volume part of the inflation for pool floats, etc more than anything.
Sounds like this is a one use kind of tool. If you can't weld find someone that can, it will take 5 minutes.
Take a piece of stock whatever length you want and weld a piece of 1/4 extension at whatever angle you need. You could even weld on a socket and make it even more compact. Or...
Like the guy above me said, definitely not pea stone. Don't know what they call it in your area but here it is called item 4. I've heard it called things like 3/4 minus and lots of other things all around the country. Crushed stone with lots of different sizes that will lock together.
If the tap breaks cant you just turn the rotor left or right and tap a new hole in the hub? And next time anti seize the **** out of that phillips screw they insist on using.
The problem is even if it is sold by amazon they bin things that are the same item form different sellers. Amazon is probably not selling fakes but third party sellers might mix in their stock in with amazons and who knows what you will get. I stopped buying anything expensive from amazon after...
The most durable by far is going to be access control with magnetic strikes but also the most expensive, even if you do it yourself. Once you set it up it’s great though. Centrally managed uses, set schedules on who can access what, deactivate a user when they leave weather it is a key fob...
ConCretin speaks the truth. I poured about this time of year a couple of years ago and temps hit like 26 or so overnight. It had hot water in it, I covered with blue tarps that night after it set and I checked a few times with an ir thermometer over the next couple of days. It never came...
I bought a house with a roof like that. The roof was 23 years old. I was told by a roofing friend that shingles manufactured around that time had a defect, something with the way the layers were bonded together I think. The plywood underneath was great, only half a sheet needed to be replaced...
A few decades back we had craftsman tools. If the bolt was tight you put a pipe on it. If it didn't loosen you grabbed a longer pipe. If the ratchet let go you went to Sears and they kept replacement ratchets right behind the register. Handed them the broken one and walked out with a...
Same. I have a pair that are probably 30 years old and function as they should. I remember when my father bought them - it was a lot of money for him back then.