Eric29
Well-known member
I’ve found that an air powered framing nailer really saves me some aches and pains.
^^^Cardboard and concrete. LOL. I was afraid to admit it. I've been wiring a trailer that way.
Boomer checking in. I'm almost 58 and have arthritis starting up in my hands. It *****. Yesterday I had to do a water pump swap on my 2015 Mustang GT. ~ Radiator/overflow cap. Cannot unscrew it cold. Extremely difficult warm. Found an ebay seller that makes a crows foot type wrench for it. Ordered it too.
So now that I'm older, I get to buy geriatric friendly tools.![]()
Maybe a smaller 'strap wrench' could be useful to you at times?Do a google image search for 2015 Mustang coolant tank. That and the cap are plastic. It threads on like a bottle cap, not a typical push and twist cap. They are made of different types of plastics. The cap contracts more than the tank making it much tighter. When cold, the cap is almost impossible to remove even for the strongest guy with G.I. Joe’s Kung-fu grip.
But they've actually come in handy several times for this and that.Age, hell to acquire and ***** to attainment..(I'm 70, but in party years , 187)
^^ I reckon it's so.I've been stocking up on material handling stuff preparing for when my parts start going out. An engine hoist has proven to be most useful for unloading stuff out of the truck. Most recently a garden tiller. And I recently acquired one of those hydraulic lifting tables from HF. That thing is really handy! But... LIGHT! There's never enough light anymore!
Arthritis run in my family big time. It doesn't hurt, just the clumsiness . One of my ratchets in parts in a bag.But my mom took lots of ibuprofen, it ruined her stomach. If Tylenol, or it's generic, works, it's easer on you.
A close friend (he is early 60s) uses MSM (methyl sulfonyl methane). Apparently the brand can make a difference. He prefers the Doctor’s Best brand.Not complaining although if you ask my wife you will hear a different story...
I can no longer feel the ground anymore because of my diabetes, my doctor has me on some kind of elephant pill that I take three times a day something to do with the nerve endings in my feet; it sure works I can tell when it wears off.
Still doing things in the man cave but not as fast as in my younger days, plus all the heat and humidity really slows me down.
Tools for the old age any beer that is sugar free...Do they make such a beer???
A close friend (he is early 60s) uses MSM (methyl sulfonyl methane). Apparently the brand can make a difference. He prefers the Doctor’s Best brand.
After about a week of use i get a lot of decrease in foot joint pain. If i stop using it the pain returns.
Anybody else use the MSM?
I have another trick for a magnifier. I take a pic with my cell phone and then enlarge the picture.
But... LIGHT! There's never enough light anymore!
Due to the small size of my work area, none of my machines or vises get adequate light for decent detailed work. This Cree LED work light is great. It operates on batteries, so I can take it anywhere. It has a strong magnetic base so it works just about anywhere in the shop. The long flexible neck puts the light right where you need it. About 10 hours of light on 3AA batteries, and I use the rechargables, rotating 6 batteries with 3 always on standby.
Sure, hope it might be useful to you, as many of the other suggestions may also be.Thanks for the strap wrench idea! Never thought about getting me one of those until now. Hell, I could just one in the kitchen for jar lids.
Gotta order that Cree light now. That looks like a winner.
I have another trick for a magnifier. I take a pic with my cell phone and then enlarge the picture.
Slightly OT, but did Ford figure out that the degas bottle hose needs a checkvalve in it from the factory? For my 2013 (and model years around that time), the cars were shipping with degas bottle hoses with no checkvalve, resulting in premature water pump failures. I fondly remember starting to re-use some of the original bolts, only to find--to my great delight--that they snapped at around 10 ft-lb of torque (that's not a typo).Boomer checking in. I'm almost 58 and have arthritis starting up in my hands. It *****. Yesterday I had to do a water pump swap on my 2015 Mustang GT. Hose clamps ****. Especially when all I have is Knipex channel locks. I could use my right hand to compress the clamps, and then attempt to use my left hand to pull on the hose. It was a struggle.

yes.A close friend (he is early 60s) uses MSM (methyl sulfonyl methane). Apparently the brand can make a difference. He prefers the Doctor’s Best brand.
After about a week of use i get a lot of decrease in foot joint pain. If i stop using it the pain returns.
Anybody else use the MSM?
Opti-Visor FTW! Made in USA and a godsend for fine work on electronics, etc. when you reach that “certain age”.
https://doneganoptical.com/product/optivisor/
Slightly OT, but did Ford figure out that the degas bottle hose needs a checkvalve in it from the factory? For my 2013 (and model years around that time), the cars were shipping with degas bottle hoses with no checkvalve, resulting in premature water pump failures. I fondly remember starting to re-use some of the original bolts, only to find--to my great delight--that they snapped at around 10 ft-lb of torque (that's not a typo).
They probably didn't want to spend the extra pennies to make a pump that could last 100k miles.I don't remember seeing a check valve anywhere in the lines. But after looking at the WP I pulled off, it is completely a piss poor design of a pump. needs better bearing support. Lots of tension on the pulley in one direction causing side loading of the bearings. I can move the impeller a 1/4" off center in any direction.

Ibuactin for pain killer.

Alas the Ibuprofen that I've purchased over the last 3~4 months from Meijer grocery stores, here in west MI, have seemed mostly inert, with almost none of the affect it used to provide.
Have I built-up an Ibuprofen immunity... or what ?!![]()