OP
This spring I replaced a couple of brake lines on my '93 f150 and could not find my 3/8 combo wrench that I was using on the bleeders. Looked all over the driveway and couldn't find them. Ordered a replacement from ebay. The day after the replacement was delivered I was backing out of the drive to leave for work and see something shiny in the gravel in my mirror. I swear I walked past it everyday for about a week. Pretty sure I didn't see it because I was looking for it.

Curious how often this happens. Either out of the blue or because you need something and you know you had one but can't find it?
Last year I completely organized all my tools, put labels on tool cabinet drawers, everything clean and organized. Anything missing I ordered and replaced. Then I'll think of something I need, I'm 100% sure I had one and it's missing.
Curious how often that happens, you spend hours looking and it drives you crazy! Lots of times it will be something sentimental or odd, something you can't replace.[emoji848]
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Oh, you are not alone!
Missing Klein diagonals, 2 Snap on bit sets, 1 hacksaw.
Still looking.
I broke my snappy 3/8 drive 3/4" socket. Since I already have most the tools I'll ever need there in no driver that comes around so I just though dam, I'll have to keep my eyes open amoungst my local resellers for another. I kept the broken one at the back of the bench where I see it often as a reminder. I knew I could grab my 19mm instead and did so for about 6 months but every time I looked at the broken one at the back of the bench I'd mentally beat myself up for not replacing it yet. Then one day I was sorting out my snappy spares drawer and what do you know, I already had a spare. Sheesh.
I’m 66, been on the farm all my life. I can think of three tools I’ve lost. A sears hammer I’m sure my son left somewhere on a fence line. A sears pocket knife I know I left on a grain drill over 40 years ago. (I know the spot, I still look when there), a Craftsman 9/16 combo that when into a grain truck, but not before poking a hole in the auger tube and a sweet pair of Klein pliers.
Those pliers were old and I’ve never seen a pair like them, the one handle was bent the other way, made it very comfortable to use but they had to be used that one way.
Still miss those.
so... you warrantied yourself... bet you, just like the drivers will have to eat the return.
Don't feel too bad about that... When we were kids, my Dad couldn't find his binoculars and was asking us kids what we did with them. We had no idea because we didn't take them, but he suspected us anyway. Fast forward nearly a year, one day I notice the binoculars sitting on this big rock that was near one of our outbuildings. This rock was maybe 30' from the driveway, and fully visible from the garage, shop, house, etc. We'd all walked/driven by the binoculars probably hundreds of times - literally hiding in plain sight for nearly a year. When I told Dad where I found them, he then remembered that he was looking at some deer in our grove of trees and must have set them down. I'll give it to the 1970's era Bushnell binocular quality - even after sitting outside for a year, the glass was (still is) crystal clear.

i acquired lead ladles years ago.
moved from here, to there, and back again multiple times.
finally had a need for them. been looking unsuccessfully for a year.
and im NOT buying one
That's me too. I always assume someone stole it, which has happened a few times. Sometimes it's just someone borrowed a tool, forgot to return it...not intentionally stealing it.When something goes missing out in my shop, I start looking for the thief who stole whatever is was. It's usually some item that cost a dollar, and they walked right past all the expensive stuff in my shop to steal a chip brush or something. I always have the same reaction picturing some burglar in a black mask robbing me, and then I always remember placing it wherever I find it too, followed by feeling stupid thinking someone broke into my shop to steal one small thing, and leaving thousands of dollars worth of tools behind. It's worse at work. Right away I know for sure a co-worker pilfered my tape or something only to find it on my bench twenty minutes of complaining later.
There is also the "can't see the forest for the trees" thing.I'mpretty good now if others don't move my things or not put them away. When I was a carpenter it was caulk guns, flat pry bars and utility knives. Years later most of them magically reappeared.


I am trying to break myself from the habit of keeping needed tools together with an uncompleted, ongoing project. Sometimes, it is months or even years before I get back to it and that's when I find some missing tools. Likewise, there are several pieces of equipment/machinery that I tend to leave tools with that will eventually be needed. This never was a problem in the past but at the same time, I have been trying to cut down on tool duplication in my limited garage space. Simple hand tools, I find I need at least 4 or 5 of everything simply because they are kept conveniently where they will be used...and sometimes forgotten.There is also the "can't see the forest for the trees" thing.
The easiest, fastest way to find a lost tool is to buy a replacement. That guarantees that the original will immediately materialize at your feet. The most recent incident of this phenomena happened about a week ago. As I was putting away all my tools after completing a repair, one of my C-man combo wrenches was MIA. I looked everywhere for it. Finally gave up. That night, I searched ebay for a replacement and purchased one with Buy It Now. About half an hour after clicking "BUY", I found the original.

I even know where my 10mm socket is![]()
