Bob Heine
ALLIANCE MEMBER
Todd, it appears your friend is not happy with your decision. Very hard to nap on that little desk.
Todd, it appears your friend is not happy with your decision. Very hard to nap on that little desk.


I have often been amazed by what some people do to repair rusted out panels on vehicles.
That's also a lot of dirt on the floor from those cavities. No wonder it rusted the way it did.
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Todd, nice job on the air system upgrade. My air system has evolved over the years and I had a similar problem working with multiple air tools. To avoid having the bulky and heavy hose reel donut next to my air tools I put hose whips on all my portable pneumatic tools. This is the abrasive tool collection, There's also nailer and wrench collections.I’ve been using the air hose reel on the wall next to the lift quite a bit and between the plasma cutter, air tools, blast cabinet, and shop press it’s been kind of a pain to keep swapping the hose around to the different tools.










Todd, I'm afraid you're right about them getting tangled up but it isn't as bad as you'd think. I try to store them in the frequency of use. I store the least used (like the reciprocating saw) on the bottom and most used (angle and straight die grinders) on the top. Sometimes I just grab a handful of whips and pull 8 or 10 out at a time. I tend to use a half dozen pneumatic tools at a time. I do have two deep drawers on the bottom of the chest, a big one that hold the nailers and a small one that holds the smaller rotary tools.I don’t have as many air tools, but I’m certainly on the path to getting there! Right now I have all of mine in a toolbox drawer, and if I had a whip attached to each one I could see it getting tangled up in there. How do you store yours?





Yes, the Harbor Freight whips have a swivel fitting at one end. It's a male pipe thread so it doesn't work well with every tool but so far I've been able to adapt them to 90% of the air tools (paint guns being the exception). In the 20+ years I've been using these whips, the hoses and the crimped ends have been the failure point. These are pretty cheap ($5- to $7) whips so the rubber cracks long before the swivels start leaking.Are those swivel fittings on each tool? I’ve used a couple types and doesn’t seem like they last very long before leaking.























In the mean-time they decided to soldier on, there were about 4-5 thousand people in attendance. Here’s the start of the trail.
Did I mention there were a few people there?
All in all fairly entertaining, watching them struggle up challenging obstacles with a dead car in tow. Some carnage, cars tipping over, breakage, and general mayhem. They all made it to the top, though.










































I'm a little late to the conversation on whips but wanted to add, I have been using Blubird hoses for about 6-7 years now and am really happy with their ability to stay clean, flexible and have no leakage problems. I have 3 or 4 of their whips and have had no issues with the swivels leaking. I even started buying their garden hoses, the hose reminds me of the quality of Goodyear hose 15 years ago.Todd, I'm afraid you're right about them getting tangled up but it isn't as bad as you'd think. I try to store them in the frequency of use. I store the least used (like the reciprocating saw) on the bottom and most used (angle and straight die grinders) on the top. Sometimes I just grab a handful of whips and pull 8 or 10 out at a time. I tend to use a half dozen pneumatic tools at a time. I do have two deep drawers on the bottom of the chest, a big one that hold the nailers and a small one that holds the smaller rotary tools.
The impact tools would take up most of the smaller drawer so they hang on the side of the cabinet next to the compressor.
The larger sanders would also take up a lot of the space in that drawer so they hang on the ends of the paint cart.
I hang the less used Harbor Freight DA (because it's heavy) and 4-inch grinder (because it's not a popular size) on the other end of the cart.
Two of my early air sander purchases are also too bulky for a drawer so they live on top of the paint cart. The long board sander and the jitterbug are great on flat surfaces but they're aren't a lot of those on a C3 Corvette.
Yes, the Harbor Freight whips have a swivel fitting at one end. It's a male pipe thread so it doesn't work well with every tool but so far I've been able to adapt them to 90% of the air tools (paint guns being the exception). In the 20+ years I've been using these whips, the hoses and the crimped ends have been the failure point. These are pretty cheap ($5- to $7) whips so the rubber cracks long before the swivels start leaking.
My paint guns are stored in the paint cart's drawer and they are the only air tools that don't have whips on each one. Instead I have one lightweight Flexzilla (more expensive) whip with a regulator at the swivel end. There's only one quick coupler at the regulator, which clips to my belt, so it's a very lightweight setup.
One other fairly shallow drawer in the tool chest stores all the blow guns and tire inflators as well as the extra V-Style fittings and some rarely used tools.
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