
My five year old is still learning to read. She’s looking over my shoulder and wanted to know if we could cook with this. She thought it make a good spoon to stir
Could also use that female plug to store a metal fork for lunch.
I told my son to go hose one out with a water hose one time. Poor kid didn't think about the fact it was curved. He sprayed the water in one side and soaked himself with nasty water out the other.I got a small plastic cap stuck in a bathroom sink drain last night. Tried to scoop it out with a small pick, pick got stuck too, whole handle.
i pulled the trap and got it all out and I noticed a lot of sludge on the pipe walls.
i took some wadded up paper towels and a 12” 3/8 socket extension and tapped it through with a small deadblow like it was a cleaning rod for a rifle. Did it a few times.
thought it was a creative use for a 12” socket extension
Pretty sure everyone has done that. Smarter people have done it just once....I told my son to go hose one out with a water hose one time. Poor kid didn't think about the fact it was curved. He sprayed the water in one side and soaked himself with nasty water out the other.
We'll see if history repeats itself the next time I have to clean a drain.Pretty sure everyone has done that. Smarter people have done it just once....
Ratcheting adaptors. Homemade or store bought. These silly little things can be used with old or new ratcheting box wrenches (straight or offset), even old female drive ratchets, to use sockets. I keep accumulating different styles of them and they are so handy. I found a set of them with built-in QR which is really nice.
I keep a Gearwrench or long DBE ratcheting wrench handy in all my tool boxes with an appropriate adaptor, and can switch between box or socket as the job requires. I keep a small supplu of O-rings handy to take up any slack when switching between wrench styles.

First time I saw a buddy do that ( a few decades ago) I thought, "that's brilliant."
First time I saw a buddy do that ( a few decades ago) I thought, "that's brilliant."
I believe I had did a thread on that. I generally use 3/4" PVC or 1/2" copper. Believe it or not, the copper actually feels good on the hand.3/4” or better 1” pex cut offs ideally curved slipped over the handles on 5 gallon buckets.
Tip was posted here years ago and it was truly one of those wtf?!? why did I not think about that myself moments for me.
Big thanks again to whomever posted that.
Good to know, I deal more with pex than copper and have a coil of 1” pex that has the perfect bow in it for my hands.I believe I had did a thread on that. I generally use 3/4" PVC or 1/2" copper. Believe it or not, the copper actually feels good on the hand.
5 Gal bucket handle mods
So I'm currently working on the basement, lowering the floor level, stoning and pouring some concrete. I'm hauling all the dirt out, stone and concrete back down in 5 gal buckets. The issue I have run into, as many of us have, is that the bucket handles are breaking. Other than the handles...www.garagejournal.com

FIFY.One of the tricks my shop teacher taught way back in high school was:
When you lose your drill chuck key, you can use two screwdrivers. Stick a philips in the chuck key hole, and use it as a pivot for a flat blade screwdriver that you stick in the chuck teeth. Like this:
I've had to use this trick way more times than I should have, lol.
We called that the "handshake trick". Works well with Allen keys, too.
How the heck do I stick to Allen keys together?We called that the "handshake trick". Works well with Allen keys, too.
The other option, my hack is to put an appropriate sized magnet on the head of the drill press. Just stick the chuck key to it.One of the tricks my shop teacher taught way back in high school was:
If you lose your drill chuck key, you can use two screwdrivers. Stick a philips in the chuck key hole, and use it as a pivot for a flat blade screwdriver that you stick in the chuck teeth. Like this:
I've had to use this trick way more times than I should have, lol.


That's one of my go to things I do to anything that holds a chuck.The other option, my hack is to put an appropriate sized magnet on the head of the drill press. Just stick the chuck key to it.
I can get a picture.
On the subject of Allen keys, in a pinch two smaller ones can be wedged into a larger sized hole, if your adolescent self lost the size you need.Works well with Allen keys, too
where's @PelicanPines on this one? Trying that hack and thinking.......... hmmm I've seen this done someplace before.On the subject of Allen keys, in a pinch two smaller ones can be wedged into a larger sized hole,
I think I've seen that movieOn the subject of Allen keys, in a pinch two smaller ones can be wedged into a larger sized hole, if your adolescent self lost the size you need.
Somebody called this a handshake wrench.
Wrench cheater. Clever.Put your key on a chain, you'll never lose it or pinch your fingers again. Make up a wrench cheater and you won't break another wrench.