WildwoodChuck
Well-known member
What!!! this is Garage Journal there is no such thing as ending a tools life. No really it isn't profitable enough to repair them and have them go out again.
I do detention work, I service existing Jail and Prison detention systems and I do retrofit. Airteq, Folger Adam, Southern Steel and so on. I get a lot of really cool tools but the work is hard on them. as mentioned in other posts I destroy Wiha bits like there is no tomorrow Monday alone I broke 5 1" T25 security bits and kept right on going. Yesterday morning the M18 impact started not going when I pulled the trigger, about 20 minutes before the end of the day my 6" Metabo grinder just stopped spinning after 3 hours of constant use.
We have 2 service trucks and 2 job boxes that 2-4 guys work out of. We kind of have a progression of tools that I started when I started with the company. New tools go in the trucks and then the road box gets the truck tool and the Wabash Box gets the road box tool. The reason for this is we always have fresh tools in the trucks for service calls and the most worn go to Wabash to die because we are the GC for that project and I can make as many trips as I need to outside the fence.
Since November of 2015 I have ended the lives of 2 DeWalt 20v and 1 18V drills, 3 impacts 1 DeWalt 18v, 1 20v and the M18 from yesterday, 1 Milwaukee grinder, 2 Metabo grinders and 4 DeWalt grinders and a 1 DeWalt 18v reciprocating saw. That may seem like a lot but remember they are already worn by the time they get to that job box. We go through a lot of pry bars and hammers, the Wilton unbreakable 32oz ball peen, not so unbreakable. The Gearwrench punch and chisel, junk! Stanley punch is strong but I don't like the stubby point for screw/bolt extraction, whoever makes the Craftsman punches as new as last year they are great we just beat on them.
We have a cart in the shop that worn stuff goes on because our Industrial supplier has trade in sales where we get 100 dollars or so off a tool if we trade in a competitor tool. Hand tools go in the scrap bin at the shop if it was a junk purchase to start with or it was bought as a beater tool like the black and red handle screw drivers for less than a dollar from Lowes, we drive them between the door and frame on the hinge side of the door to hold it while we weld on hinges and over time they get messed up.
I don't want you to think we trash everything because we do have really nice stuff that we take good care of but in our line of work some stuff gets worn out or is basically a consumable like grinders, drills and impacts.
I do detention work, I service existing Jail and Prison detention systems and I do retrofit. Airteq, Folger Adam, Southern Steel and so on. I get a lot of really cool tools but the work is hard on them. as mentioned in other posts I destroy Wiha bits like there is no tomorrow Monday alone I broke 5 1" T25 security bits and kept right on going. Yesterday morning the M18 impact started not going when I pulled the trigger, about 20 minutes before the end of the day my 6" Metabo grinder just stopped spinning after 3 hours of constant use.
We have 2 service trucks and 2 job boxes that 2-4 guys work out of. We kind of have a progression of tools that I started when I started with the company. New tools go in the trucks and then the road box gets the truck tool and the Wabash Box gets the road box tool. The reason for this is we always have fresh tools in the trucks for service calls and the most worn go to Wabash to die because we are the GC for that project and I can make as many trips as I need to outside the fence.
Since November of 2015 I have ended the lives of 2 DeWalt 20v and 1 18V drills, 3 impacts 1 DeWalt 18v, 1 20v and the M18 from yesterday, 1 Milwaukee grinder, 2 Metabo grinders and 4 DeWalt grinders and a 1 DeWalt 18v reciprocating saw. That may seem like a lot but remember they are already worn by the time they get to that job box. We go through a lot of pry bars and hammers, the Wilton unbreakable 32oz ball peen, not so unbreakable. The Gearwrench punch and chisel, junk! Stanley punch is strong but I don't like the stubby point for screw/bolt extraction, whoever makes the Craftsman punches as new as last year they are great we just beat on them.
We have a cart in the shop that worn stuff goes on because our Industrial supplier has trade in sales where we get 100 dollars or so off a tool if we trade in a competitor tool. Hand tools go in the scrap bin at the shop if it was a junk purchase to start with or it was bought as a beater tool like the black and red handle screw drivers for less than a dollar from Lowes, we drive them between the door and frame on the hinge side of the door to hold it while we weld on hinges and over time they get messed up.
I don't want you to think we trash everything because we do have really nice stuff that we take good care of but in our line of work some stuff gets worn out or is basically a consumable like grinders, drills and impacts.



WTF! I replaced it with a lil length heavier gauge. Now it works again! Perhaps an extra long extension cord helped kill it IDK either way I'll put the blame on cheap Chinese copper wire.