
www.jerseydiscounttool.com
Link to that bit holder please.Some cheap snags from JB Tool
Gotta luv a $12 made in Vietnam socket set. Good thing I only bought it for the case.
My first Astro sockets. I must say the finish is damn nice. And some OEM gripper sockets to throw in my truck box.
And these bit driver rails. I’ve fn had it with the Milwaukee boxes and thought I’d try these out. At $1.99, I didn’t figure i wouldn’t lose much if they were **** so I bought 10 of them.
Turns out, they’re pretty decent. The magnets **** a set but I didn’t buy them for that reason. I do like that they grip decently but don’t put up a fight removing them just short of needing a 48” prybar
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Here ya go but sorry Man, they all goneLink to that bit holder please.
I too suffer from needing sutures after trying to grab a bit from a Milwaukee case of drill bits.
www.jbtools.com
I'd never seen one like that....Here ya go but sorry Man, they all gone
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Cal-Van Magnetic Bit Rail Holder - Holds 1/4” & 5/16” bits (119)
Buy Cal-Van Magnetic Bit Rail Holder - Holds 1/4” & 5/16” bits (119) with an everyday low price and fast shipping! JB Toolswww.jbtools.com
Ernst has similar versionsHere ya go but sorry Man, they all gone
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Cal-Van Magnetic Bit Rail Holder - Holds 1/4” & 5/16” bits (119)
Buy Cal-Van Magnetic Bit Rail Holder - Holds 1/4” & 5/16” bits (119) with an everyday low price and fast shipping! JB Toolswww.jbtools.com
Those are cool too. I jumped on these because I'm a cheap basturd and @ $1.99 figured WTH. If they don't do what I'm after I'll try out the Ernst since it'll match 80% of the other whatnot's organizers in my box. Thanks Fed.Ernst has similar versions








I'll be back working with the family tree company on what are usually my days off for the next few weeks or perhaps longer, at least until my brother gets back to work post-surgery. Got to looking and a lot of my tree gear and saw maintenance tools needed a refresh.
LogRite 48" Cant Hook
Timber Savage files, handles, and a file holder (there's a Husqvarna flat file in there too), a couple Stihl Torx wrenches, and Pferd chain files. That style file holder, that holds flat and round files, is by far my favorite, but I'm not sure whose files I like best any more, so I'm trying a few here made in Germany (Pferd) and Switzerland (Vallorbe - Timber Savage - Forester).
Some of the orange screnches, and I figured I'd give a set of these diamond rotary tool chainsaw bits a shot. They were cheap. My gut feeling is they will work, but probably not for long, and I'm not sure whether I'll be able to use them quickly / easily without getting the teeth too hot to lose temper, and if they'll actually be any easier / faster than hand filing, which I'm pretty good / fast at. I figure they're worth a shot.
A new set of wedges
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Did the dealer sell those Stihl Torx screwdrivers to you? We have two in my area, and those screwdrivers are something on my list ever since I saw one a salesman had laying out working on something. Our Deere dealer (a fairly new Stihl dealer) will sell them to me no questions asked. My regular Stihl dealer (50+ years old, and my servicing dealer) won't because apparently Stihl limits these tools to purchase by the dealer only for its own use.






You probably could/should post this over here also as I think this is pretty unique;
? I can't imagine this is remotely true...Based on the comments you would have thought every law enforcement agency out there was coming for him since "any piece of track is stolen property", possession is a felony, and he would probably be arrested soon after posting the picture...lol
It's still better than towel drying if it avoids you wiping the water off in a circular pattern across the panels. The nylon thread used for the edges cuts swirls in the paint. A blower followed by patting with an edgeless towel (preferably a microfiber) does a pretty great job of avoiding those swirls.My solution to the problem was a secondary benefit of switching to blow drying with the leaf blower. But blow drying with a leaf blower is somewhat dependent on the car being ceramic coated, otherwise you’re going to need a blower way more powerful than I have. Because my truck isn’t ceramic coated and blow drying this way would take forever the way the water sticks to it.
I should have known better than to click, but he shaved so I didn't recognize him. I despise VGC - oof...This guy, while irritating, took forever but basically covered those:
I was searching for a way to make an improvement to the (apparently) older design that we're complaining about. I'm not interested in buying a new box, I feel like Milwaukee should offer a trade-in deal.
Mike


...throw away picks to keep in the boat for birds nests...
Not long ago some poor SOB posted a picture of an anvil he made out of a piece of RR track on a tool Facebook page.
Based on the comments you would have thought every law enforcement agency out there was coming for him since "any piece of track is stolen property", possession is a felony, and he would probably be arrested soon after posting the picture...lol

- Oiler by Pressol (Made in Germany) & multi-purpose oil by Ravenol (Made in Germany)
Oiler: https://www.pressol.com/schmiertechnik/?lang=en#!/c/43/i/1741/03903
Oil: https://www.ravenol.de/en/product/industrieoel/ravenol-feinmechanik-oel
- “Hardline” folding knife with D2 steel blade (Made in China) and rafter square (Made in USA) by Milwaukee.
Kind regards,
Olli

Olli -- the sheet metal organizer at the back of your workbench, did you build that?
It is made by the workbench manufacturer, I purchased it directly with the workbench. ( https://www.friedrich-kuepper.de/ )
Although it’s a very simple design, I don’t have the option of perfectly bending and folding sheetmetal at these sizes.
Kind regards,
Olli

I was considering a stubby ratchet like this the other day when none of my others didn't quite fit the bill, SO comes tomorrow, maybe?LOL
Do you really think any of us bought that???
Mike
Just for gapping down, nothing to open gaps. For that I'd just do it old school (until I find a better tool for it!). I haven't needed to open gaps on any plugs I've bought in a while though luckily - some of the cars I've been working on recently require gaps in the range of .020.Interesting. Does this have a provision for opening the gap? Just looking at it, I would guess not.