6 pt crowsfeet wouldn't work 90% of the time for me. I use both too often (sometimes at the same time) to choose for work. At home, I would go with the crowsfeet. I can turn cheap wrenches into angle wrenches in a pinch if needed.
This is why we are moving away from it at work. The can nozzle breaks and because it is integral to the can, you just can't put a new nozzle on it and several cans out of the couple of cases we've went through recently have lost the propellant with a third of the can left.
A local vendor...
Same cart but midnight blue on my local CL for $750 in great condition. Once I have my mind set on buying something, I check CL 4+ times a day. Drives the wife nuts.
About 14 years ago I was driving and all of a sudden traffic was crawling and as I got closer to the origin of the slowdown, I noticed traffic swerving around something. When I got up to it I seen a commercial duty Keller 12' extension ladder laying in the middle of the road. Pulled over and...
Actually wasn't familiar with that model at all but some manufacturers have a "style" I recognize. The picture of the mirror was too much info.
As for the shop, not until I have it looking presentable. Too many back to back to back projects.
Great looking space. I've been working on my "MIG like TIG" technique with decent success on the rare occasion that I'm not using dualshield. BTW, if you need someone to be a test mule for Raptor 700 parts, I might be willing to do that.;)
Hello. Stumbled upon this place through a link in another forum (welding web) that Jack Olsen belongs to while admiring the 12 Gauge Garage. Couldn't resist joining in all the fun.
Jason