... because it was designed to hold pop (or soda if you're a weirdo).
This made me laugh more than I should have. 
This made me laugh more than I should have.
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Where do "soft drinks" fit into that categorization ?
Where I grew up the hard candy on a stick was a lollipop and out here they call them suckers. A sucker, where I grew up, is someone that is easily deceived, haha.
Childhood joke: Hear about the fight down at the store? A boy licked a sucker.
Also bags = sacks = pokes
Skipping school vs sluff/slough (sp?)
And, there's a city named Hurricane, pronouced Her-ih-can ("can" like tin can).
(Completely off topic here)
Pop, soda, coke, soft drinks... Another good one is sloppy joe, loose meat, maid rite, and tavern.
I honestly find dialectical differences fascinating. Even within a state like Iowa you can sometimes tell where someone is from based on slight variations in accent and what they call things. You know someone is from northwest Iowa if its called 'hot dish' (instead of casserole) and they pronounce words with a long 'o'. You can just about bet someone grew up south of I-80 if they have the southern Iowa/northern Missouri twang and call it a 'crick' (instead of creek or stream). My wife really gets a kick out of how I can tell if someone is English, Scottish, Irish, Australian, South African, or from New Zealand based on their accents. To people from these countries, the difference is probably obvious, but to Americans they all sound pretty similar.
SW Missouri has Nevada - Knee-veigh (like weigh)-duh.
...Grew up going to west Iowa, Holstein to be exact...
...Love the 883's and have been wanting to build a basic ape hanger just like yours...
...Have to admit, had to use the morse code translator to understand you sig...
...you mentioned that this wasn't a glamor or huge garage build... I think pretty much everyone that has posted agrees that these type of budget, get me done builds are what the majority of us live through as our reality and it's awesome you are documenting the process...
SW Missouri has Nevada - Knee-veigh (like weigh)-duh.

I find it very interesting that you commented on that specific town Andy. No joke, as we were driving by there a few weeks ago on our way home from family Thanksgiving in Arkansas, my wife and I were cracking jokes about how they probably had a different way of pronouncing it. We have a Nevada, IA that is pronounced "Nah-veigh-duh".
We also saw a sign for Osceola, MO... in Wisconsin its "Ah-see-oh-lah". In Iowa its "Oh-see-oh-lah".
), and I was born 8 miles south in Humansville. My only certain claim to being human was my place of birth. Big flat rock there, I guess. The Sac-Osage River bridge you crossed a few miles west of Collins is a mile upstream from my mom's dad's farm. Kind of my neck of the woods.Now you're getting personal...

Every time I see your work bench tops I drool.
walt
Nice job tucking the saw and cart away under your bench.Makes me think now why do I have mine out taking up bench top space when I don't really use it very often. Hmmmm.
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Nice work on the saw cart. Bench top looks great too
bdbecker your saw cart really fits the bill.
Form and function plus..
Regards
Nice looking table!That 3" channel is a real find, a nice size and good and strong! You'll find lots of uses for it, 38" makes legs! And welded leg to leg makes on heck of a box.
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I usually only post projects of significant impact (workbench, shelves, roof, etc.) for the sake of time and interest. However, if you are reading through this thread looking for ideas or inspiration, let me tell you that its all the small things that really make the biggest difference. Take this sander organizer box I threw together last night while my wife got ready to go out to dinner. No fancy joints, no innovative concept that's going revolutionize how we store sanders, its just a simple box made out of simple materials that solves a problem. I will no longer have to worry about cords getting tangled up or sandpaper falling all over the place. When I need to sand something, I can now just pull out this box and have everything I need.
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Sometimes I think we focus so much on the next big thing that we forget about all the little things we could be doing in the meantime. Its little projects like this that were the turning point for me. Projects that this where I could complete them quickly and immediately enjoy the results that really got the ball rolling for my garage refresh.
So if you are reading this forum thinking how great it would be to have a nice big space with a lift and a workbench, but you don't have the money and your garage is a total disaster, I would challenge you to start looking around your space for cheap, half-hour projects like this. Little things you can do today that will make a difference in the long term. That, my friends, is where the real change happens.
....Sometimes I think we focus so much on the next big thing that we forget about all the little things we could be doing in the meantime. Its little projects like this that were the turning point for me. Projects that this where I could complete them quickly and immediately enjoy the results that really got the ball rolling for my garage refresh.
Very wise advice.
When you get stumped, I like Roy Underhill's (Woodwright Shop) advice: sharpen your chisels and oil your planes when you get stumped. It takes your mind off your problem and you'll always sharp chisels and well oiled planes. I like that, when you screw up and can't figure out what to do, do something you know how to do. It really improves your attitude.!