PelicanPines
ALLIANCE MEMBER
Please... with all us nuts... wrenches are required...
Being one generation removed from The Great Depression (both parents lived through it) they passed on to me the importance of taking care of your stuff as well as repairing what you can rather than replacing. As more generations come along, there is less emphasis on maintaining and repairing and more on getting a new one. It's hard to learn how to work with your hands when kids today stare at Xbox and the like.
Why do I have tools? Not only did my dad farm, he was also an automotive machinist and needed tools for both jobs. He taught me how to use my hands to repair stuff and I've learned a lot from others since his passing. I've bought my own tools and I also inherited many of his when he passed. I use them as needed when needed. I can't envision being tool-less.
If someone wants to learn how to wipe hard drives and program computers, so be it. The world will always need ditch diggers and mechanical repair.
Off the box.
it seems like some of you guys are complaining about people that hire others to do what we do for ourselves. you seem to forget that many members here are in fact the ones that get hired. thanks to every paper pusher without so much as a #2 phillips, 3 guys here have jobs.
One thing that to me is a tell tale sign is watch how people treat their waiters/waitresses at a restaurant. We used to be friends with a couple that I hated to go out to dinner with because of the way they treated the people serving our food. I told him one day that these people are doing their job to the best of their ability no different than you or I yet why do you choose to talk down to them? He replied he didn't realize he was. I said your whole demeanor screams "you are beneath me" and it is a bit snobby and pretentious.
My wife likes to go to estate sales, she finds kitchen gadgets, books, etc she thinks are a bargain. I always head for the garage and basement. It's almost without fail that the upper level homes, and we've picked through the leavings of some pricey digs, seldom have any kind of tools. On the other hand, I've scored some decent tool buys in very modest homes. Best of the lot, for me, was a 3 HP Porter Cable 1/2" router for $50. House was a dump, but the old ******* had some good tools!
mike, it wasnt you specifically but you did contribute to the feeling. dont get me wrong, i get where you are coming from and agree with you about your neighbor's behaviour. it's just this thread as a whole has a mild undertone of reverse-elitism to me (something to the effect of "go ahead and spend your money, i'll save mine and do the work myself"). an undertone i admit i have felt personally even with my comparatively non-existent skills. just my opinion, humble or otherwise.
i understand and no apology needed. sometimes tone and intent doesnt translate well into text and interpretation can turn the most benign statement into the pinnacle of hate speech. that's the very reason i havent talked to my brother in over a year.I apologize, that was not my intent. I just want to reiterate, I am grateful for the skill set that I have nurtured and I have no problem with people spending money on repairs that they choose not to do. They just don't need to be rude by being condescending to those who choose to be frugal and/or don't have the mechanical mindset.
The way I look at it is that my skill set is somewhat of an "equalizer". Even though I don't have a college degree nor make six figures or drive high end luxury cars, I feel as though I live a very rich life. I am able to enjoy a few luxuries in life that people with a lot higher paying salaries are able to enjoy. One in particular in RVing. If it weren't for my mechanical knowledge and skill set there is no way in hell my wife and I could afford to RV. For that I am truly grateful, not elite nor entitled in the least.
Mike.
Living with no tools? But how do they fix their tools if they have no tools to fix them with? This must be a myth. No human kan live without tools!

I have family members who fit into all of the above statements. They feel that working with your hands or having an actual trade is beneath them. My wife's sister is divorced, again, and was needing a car after the first of the year so I offered to sell her my wife's Altima back in January/February timeframe when we were upgrading my wife's car. I offered it to her at a very good deal, explained all of the benefits of how it was maintained, new tires, service records, immaculate condition of interior and exterior without any scratches and she could have it paid off in no time and have a reliable car that she could then use the payment money for to apply towards other debt. The only thing I told my wife I would NOT do is carry the note on it. I told her I would help with the maintenance of the car if she would cover parts/supplies and that I would go one step further and have her teenage son come over and I would teach him how to service the car, rotate tires and do simple preventive maintenance items on the car. She was appalled and said her son was going to college and getting a degree so he doesn't have to do manual labor. I could have ***** slapped her right then and there.
This woman's husband, before they were divorced, would make jokes about me fixing something around our home rather than merely replacing it. I repaired a solder joint on my wife's blender one time and my wife was bragging about it to her sisters and they made fun of her for it. I tried telling him my "opinion" about what a disposable society we have become and how people don't want to take care of things any longer nor make them last, they just want to replace them when they are tired of them which is part of the reason why manufacturers don't make things last any more. He told me that was an old and dangerous way of thinking.
I have neighbors who drive through the neighborhood with CV joints squeeling and carrying on for months even after I have given them a quote to fix it and they tell me they don't have any money, yet they will go on vacation and ask us to keep an eye on their house because they need a break and they "deserve" it. Holy **** I don't understand people at all anymore.
I completely agree. I would go out of my freakin' mind if I couldn't walk out back to my shop and fondle my tools on a daily basis. I have to always be doing something productive in my shop.
My neighbor stopped by the other night while I was under our coach replacing the exhaust manifold and turbo on it. They have a nice fifth wheel trailer and travel a bit as well and he said "wouldn't it be great to be able to have enough money to be able to take these RV's to the shop and have someone else repair them?"
I thought about that statement later that night and I thought to myself, I could afford to take this and have it done at the local Cummins dealer and I still choose to do the repair myself for two reasons, first because by doing the repair myself I keep the cost of ownership lower and keeps more of my money in my own pocket but secondly and more importantly because I just flat don't trust anyone to touch my ****. I know a lot of mechanics in my area and I can count on one hand and have fingers left over how many I would trust to get anywhere near my **** with a wrench in their hands.
Mike.

I wonder when society changed from "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" to "Oooh, this is shiny I want it"
Using this post to take a slightly different angle on tool ownership ...
Aren't all those kitchen gadgets tools? I certainly think so. Perhaps we are defining the word "tool" too narrowly. I'm looking at the counter in our kitchen now and see a Vitamixer, Kitchen aid, and all kinds of hand tools used for cooking.
Brian



Ya, it probably would have made more sense if you knew this guy and the context he puts nearly everything. Typical victim who thinks that the world is out to get him and everyone has it easier than he does. While bitching about not having any money or time out of one side of his mouth, he then goes on to tell you that he golfs about 4 times a week and has a nice boat sitting in driveway that is gone most weekends. He's one of those that doesn't want to keep up with the Jones' but wants to be the Jones if you know what I mean. I have no problem with people having **** and especially enjoying it, but don't walk around bitching about it and thinking everyone else has the easy life.
Basically he is a "tool" that is not allowed back into my shop. I don't need his **** nor his passive aggressive comments around me.
Mike.
So what came first? The first tool, or the tool used to fix it?![]()
Using this post to take a slightly different angle on tool ownership ...
Aren't all those kitchen gadgets tools? I certainly think so. Perhaps we are defining the word "tool" too narrowly. I'm looking at the counter in our kitchen now and see a Vitamixer, Kitchen aid, and all kinds of hand tools used for cooking.
Brian
Yes, they are tools, used to make things (like dinner). I would consider a knife, kitchen or otherwise, a "tool". Spatula is a tool, garlic press is a tool, guns are tools, etc. etc.
What do people do who live in apartments in the city?

This.My employer has a "tool set" for general use at the shop. One phillips screw driver, one slotted screw driver and a pair of adjustable pliers.
Yet they want us to maintain our job trailer, it blows my mind. I asked my Division Manager what he was going to do when I stopped using my personal tools, he just shrugged his shoulders and walked away.
....and I found this place and now I have this issue going on... You know what I'm talking about.




Oh yeah.... and they have absolutely no idea how to change a flat tire on a car.
Which is a substantially less valuable skill when they don't have any need to own a car.
Which is a substantially less valuable skill when they don't have any need to own a car.
People should learn how to change a flat even if they don't own a car. If they don't have a car, they might be riding in someone else's car someday and there might be a flat. And if the driver is older/frail, the younger person should know how to change a flat.
Whether it's a female or male. It's a "basic" like learning how to tie your shoes, floss your teeth, etc..
My point was a generalization, of which you obviously didn't comprehend. Changing a tire is a elementary, and simple task that every auto manufacturer details in their owner's manual, and many also post in the cargo area of the vehicle.
All of which are basically the following, four simple steps:
1.) Jack up car
2.) Remove flat tire/wheel from vehicle
3.) Replace with spare tire/wheel, re-install those intricately difficult, complex mechanism, called (wait for it)... lugnuts (lefty-loosey, right-tighty, boys and girls!)
4.) Lower vehicle to ground
But using your theory, that would be reduced to just two, simpler steps:
1.) Call someone to do it for you
2.) Pray you find someone available