PugetDude
ALLIANCE MEMBER
She often surmises that I secretly have a steel plate in my head that I failed to disclose.It's your magnetic personality!
She often surmises that I secretly have a steel plate in my head that I failed to disclose.It's your magnetic personality!
My opinion/observation: With kids you need to start pretty young training them. It can be hard since at very young ages they are little help at first and slow things down a lot while trying to keep them safe etc. Some will take to it and keep it up extending skills. Others will not show much interest or aptitude and it is probably a mistake to push them too much. I found, when first starting, it can be better to keep work shifts relatively focused and under an hour with them doing other things inbetween for longer so they would not lose interest and I would not get overall slowed down too much. It should usually become apparent if kids have the aptitude and desire to extend more around middle school to early high school ages. I would not kick yourself if you tried to launch your kids doing more, but they did not turn out being the types to pick things up. All kids are different. Insofar as they learn to do some range of things very well, it can work out well for them in the end. It is a good thing that we are not all similar.All I can think about is people taking this knowledge to the grave. I have kids, wish I could teach them this stuff, but I don't even know how to do it. Generational knowledge lost- As American's, that loss of institutional knowledge is a real detriment often not discussed in the digital world IMHO.
All I can think about is people taking this knowledge to the grave. I have kids, wish I could teach them this stuff, but I don't even know how to do it. Generational knowledge lost- As American's, that loss of institutional knowledge is a real detriment often not discussed in the digital world IMHO.
Ending the 3/8” trays on 20mm must be some kind of April Fools joke![]()
Visible.This might be the only known image of Roy when he wasn't bleeding somewhere.
Blue Point (Snap on) lists both shallow and deep in 6 point. Hopefully you can hit up the local Snap on guy for those, otherwise, they wanted $20 in shipping when I looked last week.Those, and 1/4”x5/8” are the two biggest problems with filling socket trays.
He's stabbed himself in the neck with a wood shaving!Visible.
He is blotting the neck wound with sawdust.He's stabbed himself in the neck with a wood shaving!
And beeswax, in an old-timey way!He is blotting the neck wound with sawdust.
Streaming on PBS website, I think.I always enjoyed Roy's Woodwright's Shop show on PBS. I need to look around on the 'Net to see if those are available on DVD.
Knowledge may be out there, but it is not always easy to find, or free to acquire, especially if the knowledge was published in low print tun books, or the knowledge requires the use of specialized equipment that not only needs to be hinted down, but also purchased and restored.The knowledge is still out there and at this point freely available and easily found if someone has the inclination and interest.
Yeah, looks like the vise put up a hell of a fight, but in the end, the box did win!The things people thing cardboard can contain!



Knowledge may be out there, but it is not always easy to find, or free to acquire, especially if the knowledge was published in low print tun books, or the knowledge requires the use of specialized equipment that not only needs to be hinted down, but also purchased and restored.



My $60 5" Palmgren Industrial vise.
I have an old Craftsman set, and while I don't use it often, it is usually saving my **** when I am.My neighbor brought the front struts to his Subaru to me to swap out for him. I'm used to Honda's where you just need a box end wrench and an Allen key to remove the nut from the strut. I had never seen one where the nut is recessed so far into the top hat like this.
I figured out this is what pass-through socket sets are for and Harbor Freight came to the rescue. I sent the neighbor to HF to pick up this kit.
He told me to keep it, although I don't know when I'll need to use it again.
Argentina, AFIK.I'm no clairvoyant, but that's China, right?
re: that blue viseI'm no clairvoyant, but that's China, right?
snap-on long 14mm spark plug socket. I don't really need it, but it was cheap.
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NASA called, they seem to be missing one of their toilet seats?
Mike
I bought a new vegetable peeler earlier this year. My memory tends to think it was about 6 bucks. It has a thick handle and is green and yellow(so I can find it faster). If that SO was $10 then maybe it would have been in the running had I known about it, but, no way $28.