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shovel trouble!!!!!

chipper

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Feb 1, 2013
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1,137
Location
Williamsburg, va
Every shovel i buy i break the handle it doesn't matter whether fiberglass or wood is there a heavier duty shovel out there maybe steel handle or have you ever made your own handle and what did you use thanks for any info g.j
 
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chipper

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Joined
Feb 1, 2013
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1,137
Location
Williamsburg, va
Digging up stumps and root balls from bushes and small trees that I've cleared i admit that probably put more strain on the shovel than i should
 

tube_guy

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Jan 21, 2009
Messages
747
Get a digging bar to do your prying with. Shovels aren't really made to do heavy prying.
 

signcrafter

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May 9, 2012
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12,317
I have a collection of shovels of all shapes and sizes and our soil is clay and lots of roots. I've used them to dig up stumps and root balls and trenches and all sorts of things. I've broke one or two in the last ten years by prying to much on them. But I've put these shovels threw hell and back and they last for the most part. What brand of shovels are you buying that break so easy? I bought a cheaper shovel about ten years ago and snapped it like a twig the first time I used it, learned fast that paying a little more for a quality shovel is worth it. buy the best shovel you can find and try and find one with a lifetime warranty. If you are exceeding what a shovel should be doing get the right tool so you don't keep breaking the shovels.
 

4xdog

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Aug 18, 2012
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Location
Santa Fe, NM
I guess one could break something like THIS, but it would sure take work!

79W0401.jpg
 

gsmornot

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Jan 5, 2012
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Inside your screen
Not sure it will help with your issue but I sharpen my shovels to put a blade surface on the end. It helps with digging so it might help in cutting the roots instead of just trying to pry them out.
 

4xdog

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Aug 18, 2012
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Santa Fe, NM
Not sure it will help with your issue but I sharpen my shovels to put a blade surface on the end. It helps with digging so it might help in cutting the roots instead of just trying to pry them out.

When I was in junior high and high school I used to do yard and handyman work for the old brother and sister living down the street. He was probably in his eighties back in the early 70s -- so figure a guy who learned hard labor as a kid on the farm back in the 1910s-1920s or so. Back when a hand tool was often all one had. I provided the muscle, he provided the supervision.

He taught me the same thing. He learned it from a farm hand who always brought two shovels to work, and spent part of his lunchtime sharpening each one so he always had a sharp shovel ready to go.

Yup, a sharp tool makes a big difference.
 

BLJ

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Feb 26, 2012
Messages
111
Location
wv
3/4" ridgid conduit welded to the blade. i put the condiut down into the blade (socket?) beat the socket closed and welded it in. kinda hard on the hands but no more breaking handles.
 

CNGsaves

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Sep 26, 2012
Messages
13,233
Location
KS and OK
3/4" ridgid conduit welded to the blade. i put the condiut down into the blade (socket?) beat the socket closed and welded it in. kinda hard on the hands but no more breaking handles.

^ ^ ^ This but worse !! Grandpa had one that was thick wall pipe and man that baby was HEAVY . . . . you weren't going to break that handle!! Plus, it was first portable Work-Out-Gym as your arms, biceps, triceps and shoulders were in damn good shape quick when using that thing.

As a kid had a garden hoe that dad had replaced wooden handle with steel. Us kids fought over who had to use that damn thing to weed the 1 acre plot of green beens which were "summer crop" for dad to make extra money. At least we got "paid" something . . . 10 cents an hour . . big whoopee!

For modern tools, a quality fiberglass handle shovel is best tool for the job. If you're breaking these, you've got wrong tool for the job.
 
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retrobuilder

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Oct 18, 2012
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408
Location
Alpharetta GA
Check out Council Tool in North Carolina- USA made and great values in mattoxs, axes and picks and pry bars. Use the shovels for digging and dirt transfer.
 

woody 73

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Apr 14, 2009
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11,540
Location
The Great State Up North
Back in the day they used to make a Nursery shovel that used a steel strap that went all the way up the handle for Nursery workers to use. If you broke that shovel you were stronger then Superman, but those suckers are heavy to use and if you are working in all wet clay soils they become even heavier.
 

Mohawk Dave

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Joined
Oct 7, 2012
Messages
5,068
Location
SoCal
When I was in junior high and high school I used to do yard and handyman work for the old brother and sister living down the street. He was probably in his eighties back in the early 70s -- so figure a guy who learned hard labor as a kid on the farm back in the 1910s-1920s or so. Back when a hand tool was often all one had. I provided the muscle, he provided the supervision.

He taught me the same thing. He learned it from a farm hand who always brought two shovels to work, and spent part of his lunchtime sharpening each one so he always had a sharp shovel ready to go.

Yup, a sharp tool makes a big difference.

Never gave it much thought...but it obviously makes sense. Guess it's time to grab the flap disc and get to work. :thumbup:

BTW: would you want to grind the face or back on a shovel. I presume the face. ???
 

darkk

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Joined
Dec 24, 2009
Messages
3,361
Location
Willimantic, Ct.
Every shovel i buy i break the handle it doesn't matter whether fiberglass or wood is there a heavier duty shovel out there maybe steel handle or have you ever made your own handle and what did you use thanks for any info g.j

Some people could break a crow bar in a sandbox...:dunno:
 

Stick-man

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Mar 16, 2013
Messages
295
Location
Mid-South Tennessee
I have some by Nupla, and they hold up great. I'm sure you'll agree, quality tools will hold up to a certain amount of use beyond its design. Go past that point and pretty much everything will break.
 

spotco2

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May 18, 2012
Messages
1,050
Location
NW Georgia
You're doing it wrong if you're breaking every shovel you own.

They are made for digging and not prying. There are tools for that.

I've had some of my shovels for over 20 years and have never broken a handle on one.
 

CNGsaves

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Sep 26, 2012
Messages
13,233
Location
KS and OK

That little yellow thing is not a shovel . . . . .

. . . now the Big Red One . . . now THAT's a Shovel !!! :rocker:

It's called Big Brutus, an electric powered coal shovel that surface mined coal for years near Pittsburg, KS (actual location is West Mineral, KS) and now Brutus sits where it was de-commissioned since it was so big. It's a tourist attraction now. See info at:
http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/2104
 

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Dberglind

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Sep 26, 2012
Messages
221
Agree with the others, shovels are not designed for prying. It's kind of like using your ratchet as a hammer. It might get the job done, but the right tool(s) will usually do the job better and faster. Get yourself a digging bar and a pickaxe.
 
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