GarageWarrior
Well-known member
Currently liquidating my whole shop, with only a few weeks left. Have to clear it out to bare walls, so selling off pretty much everything - tools, cars, equipment, boats, machinery, electronics, bikes, household stuff. Past few weekends been busy busy with hectic selling and guys hauling off tools and supplies by the truckloads. Some stuff going for 50 cent on the dollar, some for less, but I don't plan on buying it back.
Question I'm pondering - should I keep ANY tools that would be practical to have? Cordless, sockets, screwdrivers, wrenches, what else?
For the background - too much stuff and years of accumulation. I'm tired of trying to keep up with fixing stuff and figured for how much I was spending in cost of time and cost of space to do things myself - I'd be ahead to just buy stuff that doesn't need fixing, rent toys, hire people for occasional jobs. Plus moving ...it's next to impossible with a big shop and a ton of stuff.
As of now all my machining/lathe/mill/metalworking/welding and most of the woodworking equipment been sold. Still need to offload a bunch of shop furniture, cabinets, material handling equipment and smaller hand-tools and fasteners, stock, shop supplies. Still have all the auto tools: mechanical, detailing, auto-body, painting; plus household: painting, plumbing, framing/roofing, electrical...
I will not have much free storage space, so the question is, should I keep any tools? I always did things myself, never hired people because I figured its cheaper to just buy tools... but with the cost of space and time, I think I'd be better of just hiring jobs out.
So before I sell off all my tools I'm questioning if there are any jobs that actually make practical sense to DIY? I don't think I'll be doing any more car repair, it's just not practical when mechanic can do a job 3 times as fast and has all the tools. I might buy a house in a year, but after counting how many hours I spent last time painting walls - I think it's cheaper to hire a painter. Plumbing/electrical I can do, but I'm not really fast at it with back and forth trips to home depot. Am I missing something? Advice?
Question I'm pondering - should I keep ANY tools that would be practical to have? Cordless, sockets, screwdrivers, wrenches, what else?
For the background - too much stuff and years of accumulation. I'm tired of trying to keep up with fixing stuff and figured for how much I was spending in cost of time and cost of space to do things myself - I'd be ahead to just buy stuff that doesn't need fixing, rent toys, hire people for occasional jobs. Plus moving ...it's next to impossible with a big shop and a ton of stuff.
As of now all my machining/lathe/mill/metalworking/welding and most of the woodworking equipment been sold. Still need to offload a bunch of shop furniture, cabinets, material handling equipment and smaller hand-tools and fasteners, stock, shop supplies. Still have all the auto tools: mechanical, detailing, auto-body, painting; plus household: painting, plumbing, framing/roofing, electrical...
I will not have much free storage space, so the question is, should I keep any tools? I always did things myself, never hired people because I figured its cheaper to just buy tools... but with the cost of space and time, I think I'd be better of just hiring jobs out.
So before I sell off all my tools I'm questioning if there are any jobs that actually make practical sense to DIY? I don't think I'll be doing any more car repair, it's just not practical when mechanic can do a job 3 times as fast and has all the tools. I might buy a house in a year, but after counting how many hours I spent last time painting walls - I think it's cheaper to hire a painter. Plumbing/electrical I can do, but I'm not really fast at it with back and forth trips to home depot. Am I missing something? Advice?


