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The most bad *** tool is...

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cody1325

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 17, 2024
Messages
1,077
Location
Southwest Virginia
The Jaws of Life?


In my use, it's the big hammer followed by the big pipe wrench. When all else fails, and I can't run air/electric, chances are, a big crowbar, 8 lb. sledge, and 3-foot Ridgid Pipe Wrench WILL get it loose.
 

Schurkey

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Joined
Oct 27, 2011
Messages
2,368
Location
The Seasonally Frozen Wastelands
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cody1325

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 17, 2024
Messages
1,077
Location
Southwest Virginia
Holy smoly those are big. And I thought some bid military stuff was scary first time I was near them ... Those are bigger.

The CAT dealer here usually has a couple 767s and D10s on the lot. Yep, huge.

However, the D12 is a one-off that's even bigger than the D11.

Built by an Aussie contractor, the D12 is stretched out, and has a bigger motor shoehorned in.

 

bwringer

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2013
Messages
10,253
Location
Indianapolis
My Dad was a hoarder. An epic hoarder. He lived in his parents' house, and Grandma and Grandpa were hoarders too.

After Dad died, a few days later we were picking despondently through the tons and tons of rubble wondering what on earth we would do with it all.

I found this huge, ugly copper hammer in the driveway, buried under a pile of junk in a puddle of oil and antifreeze.

I dunno, it gave me some sort of... hope, perhaps? Motivation may be a better word. Something like that. At least there was buried treasure here and there among the vast heaps of debris.

This hammer has been ridiculously useful; when you need a solid metal enormous thwack that won't mar steel parts, it's just the ticket. It's a bit softer than a brass hammer, and not brittle at all. Great for things like bearing races, for example. I use it often, and quite a few other tools I inherited, and think of Dad and the moment of finding this hammer when I use it.


TEMCO 6-A -- I'm guessing the 6 might mean 6 pounds? It's at LEAST 6 pounds, I can tell you that.
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hammer1.jpg

There's a split in the handle just starting near the head, and so I'm going to have to replace the handle at some point, regrettably. I guess I'll need to soak the handle for a few years in a bucket containing a mixture of mud, dirty oil and old antifreeze from a Studebaker to achieve a remotely similar patina.
 

rust in the eye

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Joined
Oct 2, 2017
Messages
2,750
Location
Chicagoland
The Captain and Big Brutus

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Big Brutus.JPG

The Captain is no more. Big Brutus was saved as a tourist attraction, a monument to monumental environmental destruction.
As a youngster I was able to visit a strip coal mine with a rockhound uncle. The machine there was, I think, the or close to the largest excavating machine in the world. It had a tremendous ferris wheel type arrangement out front with huge buckets grabbing enormous amounts of material which was spit out the other end. Imagine a stump grinder a hundred feet tall.
 

larry_g

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 28, 2007
Messages
16,872
Location
oregon
According to my father the greatest tool invented was the moldboard plow. It did change the makeup of this country.

lg
no neat sig line
 

Firebrick43

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Joined
May 12, 2015
Messages
13,999
Location
West central Indiana
The CAT dealer here usually has a couple 767s and D10s on the lot. Yep, huge.

However, the D12 is a one-off that's even bigger than the D11.

Built by an Aussie contractor, the D12 is stretched out, and has a bigger motor shoehorned in.

Think your getting Boeing airplanes and Cat haul trucks confused?
 

Firebrick43

Well-known member
Joined
May 12, 2015
Messages
13,999
Location
West central Indiana
As a youngster I was able to visit a strip coal mine with a rockhound uncle. The machine there was, I think, the or close to the largest excavating machine in the world. It had a tremendous ferris wheel type arrangement out front with huge buckets grabbing enormous amounts of material which was spit out the other end. Imagine a stump grinder a hundred feet tall.
You grew up in Germany?
 
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