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So my Wright Grips were stolen...

espyking83

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Joined
Jan 31, 2014
Messages
1,690
Location
Hell hole of a King Air 200
Kinda my fault. Left them on a scissor lift at a job site by accident over the weekend, and deader than ****-they're gone. Really bummed out about it, probably my favorite tools ever. Have never been more impressed with quality and value. One of those tools you want to hand down to your boy, you know?

Anyhoo, what's some of your prized tools that have came up missing?
 
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Sevenhills1952

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Joined
Aug 30, 2018
Messages
1,750
Location
Virginia
1995, had largest Lennox propane furnace installed in garage. Wife and I had to work. I couldn't stay all day. #@&#@#× installers stole about $2,000 worth of my and wife's tools. Missing tools at random are hard to detect. Actually just NOW I ordered something else I discovered missing after 23 years.

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Sevenhills1952

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Joined
Aug 30, 2018
Messages
1,750
Location
Virginia
Hindsite 20-20, never trust, take pictures.
I should have and probably will build a small tool room, lockable, so that can't happen.
Garage has alarm system.
As a technician years ago I have misplaced stuff on jobs, not often though.
I've had stuff stolen after concrete deliveries...hoses, shovels, anything not nailed down.

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GaryM909

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Joined
Apr 11, 2016
Messages
1,540
Location
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
I was working in a high rise condo about 5 years ago. I had a small job box broken into. I lost a Bosch laser level, a Walter variable speed die grinder, a Streamlight rechargeable flashlight, a good unidriver and a couple other tools. Still pissed about it.
About 15 years ago the kids were playing ball hockey in the alley and had one of the garage doors open.My son left the door open and when I got home from work my Makita chop saw was gone along with a Mikita mitre saw.
 

Alexander

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Joined
May 24, 2014
Messages
169
Location
Hudson Valley, New York
On a positive note, I did a job about a month ago and left my wire cutters behind.

The worksite had about half a dozen contractors in different fields all working in the same area.

When I went back two weeks later, they were still there, right where I left them.
 

Sevenhills1952

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Joined
Aug 30, 2018
Messages
1,750
Location
Virginia
I had a service call, bad part of town. Tool boxes in back of truck. I walk to door, ring bell, back to truck and boxes gone!
I'll never figure it out...walked 50-60 feet, my back turned for 1 minute if that.
I never ever went back to that apartment complex again.
My friend (may he r.i.p.) was a contractor...super great guy retired and worked habitat for humanity for free. Had all his stuff stolen, nice chop saw, cordless tools, etc. Weeks later police called him as they recovered stuff. He went to a warehouse where you fill out description of stolen stuff then police let you in. A warehouse filled like Wal-Mart! [emoji21][emoji21][emoji21][emoji21][emoji21]

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Sevenhills1952

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Joined
Aug 30, 2018
Messages
1,750
Location
Virginia
Kinda my fault. Left them on a scissor lift at a job site by accident over the weekend, and deader than ****-they're gone. Really bummed out about it, probably my favorite tools ever. Have never been more impressed with quality and value. One of those tools you want to hand down to your boy, you know?

Anyhoo, what's some of your prized tools that have came up missing?
Do you see one like it on eBay?

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1982fxr

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Joined
Jan 7, 2012
Messages
10,012
Location
Phoenix
I think if you fill out a police report it automatically checks the local pawnshops.

Watch Craigslist
 

ChrisLS8

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Joined
Jan 16, 2015
Messages
1,964
The most missing thing around my sites are C clamp pliers and hammers. I started taking my Bremen pliers to work instead of my Peterson and Grip Ons
 
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mobiledynamics

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Joined
Mar 14, 2010
Messages
5,045
Location
Gotham City
When I 1st started out I put a pair of tools down and walked away to grab something. there was another trade working at the same place. No less than 2 minutes came back, tool was gone. Learned alot that day......I was young and assumed who would take another working mans tools.
 

CoogarXR

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Joined
Jan 11, 2016
Messages
6,867
Location
Ohio
Back when I was a teen, I bought my first no-name NiCd cordless drill. It was, by today's standards, a POS. But, it was MINE, not my dads, MINE. I had helped a friend with a job, and I had it laying on the rear-seat floor of my car. Somebody broke into my car while I was at work, to steal the stereo. They smashed the car to pieces. Smashed the front windows, ripped the dash apart with a prybar, prybar'd the deck speakers out (I'm sure they got bent all-to-hell), they tore the back seat out and flung it in the mud to try to get in the trunk (they also punched the trunk lock but still couldn't open it).

Aaaanyway. About a month later, after the shock of my car being destroyed wore down a little, I came across the charger for my drill. I thought "huh! the drill got stolen too!". Oh well, being a no-namer, I bet they never found a charger for it.

That's the only substantial tool I ever had stolen, if I remember correctly.
 

Sevenhills1952

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Joined
Aug 30, 2018
Messages
1,750
Location
Virginia
One thing that helped me is a tool bag like this I kept filled, so on a service call at a glance I could be sure everything was there before leaving the job.e9cccb9d00c387e4abbc31b962fd7332.jpgc07793e4b64997512d190b96f7d21575.jpg

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dutchgray

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Joined
Sep 28, 2014
Messages
6,469
Location
Dorset. England.
I have lost a few tools, maybe a couple minor things stolen, only annoying thing was a brand new that day Vaughan superbar that disappeared from my tool bucket.
 

3baygarage

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Joined
Sep 1, 2013
Messages
11,979
Location
SW Florida/from Buffalo,NY
Sorry to hear about your Wright. How about a funny one?

Ever had to borrow a tool to replace a stolen tool from a borrowed car that you’re working on outside the junkyard, while yours is in a shop being repaired after an accident. :lol:

Happened to myself and a friend with a lug wrench once. This is a wildly funny story, I’ll try to keep it short and sweet.


Good friend of mine drove out to the beach clubs 45 mins south of Buffalo one summer night. He’s nothing but a hard working, fun loving, happy go lucky guy, no beef with anyone kind of guy.

The backstory: He worked overnights, and he had fallen asleep on the drive home from work one night, crashed his car just a few blocks from home. True accident, could have happened to anyone.

Car goes to a local body shop for repair. The shop owner gives him a loaner, an old beater wagon. May have been an ******, don’t remember.

So back to the beach part. This is where it gets funny. One night he takes the loaner car out to the beach bars, way far from home. He has a good time at the bars with whatever friends he was with. Comes outside, much to his surprise three tires slashed on the loaner! (I still say he must have talked to someone’s chick.) Tow company comes without a flat bed and proceeds to use a regular towtruck to tow car with 45 minutes back to the city on the end with one flat tire, destroying the flatted rim!

This is where the stolen lug wrench comes in, as do I. My friend DID NOT want to tell the body guy about the tire slashing, so he has it towed to the outside parking lot of a Upullit junkyard in the city. His plan was to make good by getting three replacement tires. Like I said, not the body guy’s personal vehicle, just a shop loaner.

Next day, I get a call from my friend. He needs help getting wheels at the yard. He picks me up in another borrowed car. We head to the yard,and to make a long story shorter, we find the needed rim, after I explain to my buddy the difference between 4 lug and 5 lug rims, as he thought they were all the same.

Out in the front lot, we begin work on the loaner, removing the three flats to take to a tire shop up the road. This is where is gets funny again. There’s a huge old multi story house across the street from the junkyard. Some completely whacked out weirdo who we can’t even see starts yelling at us from an upper story window “Hey, get outta there. Get outta there”. The a-hole who was probably drunk thought we were robbing the wheels! Anyway, we got the wheels off, I slid the lug wrench under the car and out of sight, or so I thought.

We go to the tire shop, get the the new tires mounted. Head back to the lot, I look under the car, and the lug wrench is gone. :wtf: Stolen. The wacko across the street must have taken it because there was not another soul around. Now we head to a friend’s house whose car we had, borrow a lug wrench, because there wasn’t one in the vehicle. Go, back get the job done. Did I mention several studs were severely bent on the destroyed corner of the car thanks to the awful tow. I couldn‘t get the lugs on more than part way!

What a saga. I was glad when it was over.
 

Sevenhills1952

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Joined
Aug 30, 2018
Messages
1,750
Location
Virginia
My funny lug wrench story. 1970 I worked at a service station. One day, boss was out as usual, guy walks in "I need to borrow a lug wrench". I said we don't loan tools, however, I go get a crappy bent up 4 way from back..."here's one, but I need a $30 deposit!" Guy pays deposit, leaves, no receipt.
Few days go by...boss asks me where that old lug wrench was...I told him I loaned it. After cursing me out, he had me walk up the street to buy a new one. Back then I think it was $9.00.
I go back, hand boss a shiny new lug wrench and $21.00 change..."good job my son" he says![emoji3][emoji3][emoji3]


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Kev442

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Joined
Jan 15, 2009
Messages
5,386
Location
Wi
Guys building my detached garage stole the hitch off my trailer.
Guys building my new house went through my albums in the boxes in the basement and took the ones they liked. I'm still remembering missing albums 23 years later.
 

John in OH

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Joined
Jun 2, 2007
Messages
2,444
Location
SE Ohio & Eastern Virginia
I used to work in Field Service for Babcock & Wilcox, a major builder of steam generating equipment.

One morning as I walked into work at a site where where our construction division was erecting a large fossil steam generator, I passed the boilermakers shed and a guy was cutting the handles off of a case of brand new large crescent wrenches. I go in the office and ask the old, crusty site foreman why they were cutting up new tools. He said that he always cut the handles off new tools and then welded pieces of pipe back on them in lieu of the original handles. He said, "If I put nice new wrenches out there they will all be stolen by the end of the shift, but nobody will steal a wrench that looks like a turd."
 
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