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IndyGarage

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I suppose this is a list of tools that change the game. I've got a few of those:

1. Jawhorse - I don't know if they still make them (I looked, they do!), and I don't think they ever got as popular as they should have, but I love this thing. You can clamp and hold such a wide variety of stuff, plus I have bench tools mounted on boards and put them in the Jawhorse and they work like they are bench mounted.

2. Makita XWT07Z - First impact that could literally take any lugnut right off without hesitation. I carry one in my truck and I've changed people's tires at the side of the road countless times.

3. Knipex Cobras - These were so much better than any other slip joint pliers. Today there are knock offs that are nearly as good, but the you cannot go wrong with the originals.

4. Fiskars utility knife and blades - I like a lot of Fiskars tools, but the utility knives are great, and the blades are worth buying if you use any other utility knife.

5. Nissan Electric Forklift - This thing has done so much for me over the years. If it breaks, I'm finding another one tomorrow. No decent sized shop should be without a forklift.

6. Vermette 5-12 lift - Another lifting device - this is a rolling forklift type device that can lift 500 lbs up to 12 feet. It weighs probably 150 lbs, so somewhat portable. I use it to lift stuff into and out of a truck when a forklift isn't available. I can put it in the back of the truck and take it with me to load something and unload it. The other day I unloaded an 11 foot 800 lb stainless kitchen and cooler unit out of a box truck with it. Of course a real forklift is better, but for those times and places where one isn't available, this thing is great.

7. XSTO stair climbing dolly - This is a new device I've only seen in the last couple years. It's a hand truck with a motor and rotating arm that will pull heavy stuff up or down stairs without effort. I recently bought a condo that is three stories tall. The main living area is on the 2nd floor. Everything had to go up the stairs. I manhandled a washer and dryer up to the 2nd floor with a conventional appliance dolly, but it wore me out for a week. I decided there was no way I was getting everything up without help, so I sprung for one of these. Game changer. I moved a full size stainless Kitchen Aid refrigerator upstairs with this thing - solo. I've moved literally tons of furniture and boxes with it - and it's still on the original battery charge. it's kind of a one trick pony, but if you need it, you need it.
 
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warhammer2020

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I have collected a “few” ammo cans over my 22 yrs as an Army mechanic…. But I custom made some .50 cans for my Jeep JLU. One on each side!! I painted them matte gunmetal gray to go with theme
 

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Steve.S

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Cincinnati, Ohio
My Benchmade Griptillian knife is my EDC and I use it every day. In the garage, I can't live without my Dewalt 1/4" impact. It gets used 4-5 times per week and I have no idea how I ever lived without it!
 

atch

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Apr 4, 2006
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Columbia, Missouri
From Ryan's original post:

3. Vintage Craftsman Drill Press.
Tools from the 1940s make me genuinely happy in a way that is difficult to explain to a normal person. The build quality, the look, the sheer density of the things. But the 103.231.40 earns its place on this list for a simpler reason: it works, and it never stops working. I have no reason to ever own another drill press. This one will outlive me.



My comment:

I have two of these. One is exclusively for metal use and the other is exclusively for wood use. One I've had for over 50 years and the other I've had for about 30 years. I don't know what I would do without them. Whatever drill press you have I highly recommend duplicates for metal and wood use. I also have two band saws for the same reason.
 

four.cycle

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this is a list of tools that change the game.
okay.
If we are working within the context of "game changer" stuff:

#1 would have to be the model 104 Posi-Lock puller. Initially, the $120 price tag seemed obscene, until I brought it home and put it to use.
Takes that drive hub off first time, every time.

#2 - would have to be the Vessel "Ball Grip" Phillips screwdrivers. No more cam-out ********. Grabs 'em and takes 'em out. Every time.
 

IndyGarage

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What I appreciate about the older machines is the weight and thick castings of the iron and the generous use of the steel used in the design of the older machines. They were simple in their design, but built to last.

The newer machines look to save weight so metal parts seem to be of lower quality steel and are lighter by design and of course more use of plastics in their design. You do not get the same sense they are built to last like the older machines.
A link back to the drill press thread. That is an unbelievable restoration. I've been looking for one like that for awhile to replace a Jet, that works fine, but doesn't offer anything more than utility. I recently picked up a Rockwell drill press from probably the same era as Ryan's Craftsman. If anything it's heavier than that craftsman - The Rockwell probably weighs 400-500lbs.

It's been sitting in a shop for probably 40 years and has never had a lot of love, but it switched on instantly. I also bought a Rockwell belt/disc sander from the same shop, also built like a tank. I probably won't take the time to restore them to that level, but I will make sure they live through my time with them and on to their next owner.
okay.
If we are working within the context of "game changer" stuff:

#1 would have to be the model 104 Posi-Lock puller. Initially, the $120 price tag seemed obscene, until I brought it home and put it to use.
Takes that drive hub off first time, every time.

#2 - would have to be the Vessel "Ball Grip" Phillips screwdrivers. No more cam-out ********. Grabs 'em and takes 'em out. Every time.
You got me... I ordered a couple of those ball grips as soon as I read your description.
 
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four.cycle

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^ For the price of admission on the Vessels (about $12 bucks a pop) you're going to be surprised.
The P2 x 150mm is my "go to".

ON THAT NOTE: if you order from BowersTool.com - take advantage of his "free tools" deals. Not sure what the deal on Vessel is at the moment through Harry Epstein, but check their prices as well. All my Vessel has been purchased through Bowers.
 

dr_clyde

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Jan 7, 2009
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Holland, MI
Game changers for me -

Inverter tig welders. I have made so much damn money by being able to put a tig rig in my pickup and go weld wherever it needs it. I can stick weld and tig weld anywhere i can walk to that has a 20 amp 120v circuit. Being able to make welds inside the deep bowels of a customer's facility with just an extension cord instead of a huge engine drive machine and massive amounts of leads is a BIG deal. Up on scissor lifts, inside tanks, finished office buildings, finished homes, out on the beach, inside clean rooms, all these and more I have TIG welded because I was able to bring the welder to the work.

My Acorn platen fixture table has forever spoiled me for other tables. It's dead flat, rock solid and big enough to handle most any project I can deal with on a table. I don't see myself ever buying a different style table if I have a say in the matter.

It would be hard for me to work in a shop without a bridge crane ever again. It's just so much faster and safer to move things with the crane even with the forklift available. I can place machines, move heavy stock, handle big weldments or even just assist in simple repair jobs by lifting them to where you can see the work. I freakin' love my crane.

The Marvel tilt-frame bandsaw. The undisputed king of manual saws. The ability to clamp parts directly to the saw table and bypass the vise allows you to cut finished weldments apart, or cut weird things that need a fixture to hold like spheres or cones is an absolute game changer in the custom fab world.

Despite my professed love for the Marvel, a CNC tube laser is really the best tool to come along in decades for the fabricator. It allows you to cut round tube, square/rectangle tube, channel, beams, angle or basically any structural shape to your CAD model. It will bevel, cut tapers and miters, holes and tabs, whatever. And it will do it the same, every single time. The nicer ones will even tap the threads for you or flow drill the tube to give you material to tap on a thin wall. I design every tube/structural weldment to use the tube laser if I can.

One of the best tools you can possibly use is 3D parametric CAD software. I use Solidworks, but there are lots of available options that fit different budgets. I draw EVERYTHING now before I even turn on the lights in the shop. It saves so much time and money by having the plan figured out before I turn on any tools that I very rarely try to freestyle anymore. Solidworks lets me build virtually, solving problems I didn't foresee in the model before I commit to metal. I design sheet metal, machined components, structural weldments, heck it even has pre-sets for lumber so you can design structures and woodworking projects. You should learn some CAD if you want stay relevant in the world we live in for making stuff.
 

cgrutt

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Mar 4, 2016
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Surprised the CT36 made top of the list I have one too and think its awesome but pretty sure that wouldn't be the first thing I'd grab if garage was burning down. Curious if you have added the 495802 handle and/or 452900/452902 stainless extension handles? Makes a good vac that much better IMHO.
 

CDKennedy

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Mar 30, 2014
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Location
central Ohio
Well spoken, Ryan. Without getting specific as to a list of my "got to have and keep?" - @ 70, I look at my tools that I have done much with in a variety of categories. How many will/or do I wish to ever use again? Spud bars, post hole diggers and wet tile saws (and their accouterments to set), come to mind. Inherited tools (used at times) from Dad and Grandpa's farm are a few. I will say that when I chose to build a house and researched cordless tools that I have no regret to going with a Bosche system - still giving great service 10 years later. And as a buy American Union man - if Milwaukee and dewalt rated as well then I would have gone there. WE USA make GOOD ****. but my son in law, contractor, has several Festool tools that I marvel about. I leave with " what are the memories vs the cubic feet of storage"....
 

four.cycle

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Oct 19, 2015
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Tacoma, Washington
I just looked through the entire thread and did not see this item:
Skin Wedge trim tool.jpg
called a "Skin Wedge" (or just "4140") - these are available from $7.99 and up. These Taiwan-made models work just fine, and I did not pay more than about $8 or $9 bucks a pop for them when I ordered them a few years ago. Buy at least two - just search "skin wedge" and pick your poison.
You can thank me later.
 

My Old Tools

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Jun 4, 2014
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Hamrick Lake, TX
Lot's of older shop tools, but the latest to become indispensable is the M12 stubby hex drive impact. I build wheelchair ramps 2 days a week. That thing drives screws by the hundreds. On other days, it functions as a regular impact for mechanic type work with hex inserts for 1/4, 3/8, and 1/2 inch sockets. One I could live without is the M12 Fuel Insider ratchet. I'm trying but it just seems gutless.
 
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