Toolbox

This is the place for posts that don't fit into any other category.
ACTIVE8
Posts: 2317
Joined: 16 Nov 2004, 16:49
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Unread post by ACTIVE8 »

Thanks for posting that Gregg1100 interesting reading your blue point, :wink: about Blue Point! :wink:
ACTIVA

The car that looks like a family car, but has special secret hidden abilities.
HDI
Posts: 1468
Joined: 22 Sep 2009, 15:46
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Unread post by HDI »

Wonder if the buyer used paypal for payment ! Imagine the seller fee if he did !
Then there is the small matter of collection !
Now using '00 Xantia LX HDI, pov spec :(
My past Citroens :-
'00 Xantia SX HDI, now dead due to accident :(
'99 Xantia HDI 110 Exclusive, RIP :(
'97 Xantia TD SX
'96 Xantia TD LX
'96 ZX TD
'89 BX TD
'88 AX GT
'79 CX2400 Pallas (scrapped :( )
& a couple of Peugeots !
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Kowalski
Posts: 2557
Joined: 15 Oct 2003, 17:41

Unread post by Kowalski »

Paul-R wrote:
addo wrote:better to have excellent leverage.
That's when I reach for my five foot length of gas pipe to slip over the handle of the breaker bar.

Nothing has remained unmoved by this combination so far although my son-in-law managed to put a bend in the gas pipe doing the hub nut on his Synergie!
My Dad owns a piece of steel tube which fits perfectly over the handle of his 3/4" rachet and it's thicker walled than gas pipe / water pipe. He usually just hits the handle of his ratchet with a sledge hammer when things are really tight.
handyman
Posts: 1107
Joined: 20 May 2003, 18:38
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Unread post by handyman »

Good Gawd, ratchets and hammers, hollow pipes on breaker bars! :taz: Are you lot from the Hengist Pod School of Mekaniking?

Never heard of air-driven wrenches? The torque applied is in-line, rather than tangential, therefore less likely to shear the fastener being loosened.

Whoever collected all those tools has a serious psychological problem! :shock: Must have made a Snap-on dealer both very happy and very rich.

H
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Paul-R
Moderating Team
Posts: 9023
Joined: 07 May 2009, 16:24
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Unread post by Paul-R »

handyman wrote:Good Gawd, ratchets and hammers, hollow pipes on breaker bars! :taz: Are you lot from the Hengist Pod School of Mekaniking?
Pass me my warhammer
handyman wrote:Never heard of air-driven wrenches? The torque applied is in-line, rather than tangential, therefore less likely to shear the fastener being loosened.
Assuming you have an air supply...
As I get older I think a lot about the hereafter - I go into a room and then wonder what I'm here after.

Inside every old person is a young person wondering what the hell happened.

"Trying is the first step towards failure" ~ Homer J Simpson
jgra1
(Donor 2021)
Posts: 4625
Joined: 27 Nov 2005, 19:07
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Unread post by jgra1 »

I sometimes reach for a motorcycle fork ;) its the second port of call after my breaker bar,, fits well and is impossibly tough..

beyond that i have an old thick walled aluminium tube, then scaffolding next ;)

I do sometimes use air, (before I moved last week!) but the air gun was cheap and gutless.. or the compressor.. or both,...

John
ACTIVE8
Posts: 2317
Joined: 16 Nov 2004, 16:49
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Unread post by ACTIVE8 »

Well I certainly do have some Snap On tools, but only a few! :wink:

No point in having something as decorative, other tools function well, and do a good job. I only bought the few Snap On tools as a personal treat, and if they could do something another tool couldn't, and only if there was nothing else available.

There appears to be a magpie mentality with the "collection!"

That amount of money could get a house extension. The Snap On must have a nice one! :wink:

Which won't be half inch or 3/8! :wink:
ACTIVA

The car that looks like a family car, but has special secret hidden abilities.
addo
Sara Watson's Stalker
Posts: 7098
Joined: 19 Aug 2008, 12:38
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Unread post by addo »

I was prompted to remember this thread when buying some tools the other day.

No way would I go "brand exclusive" as some things are frankly done better by one company than another, and vice-versa.

Out of curiosity, if you personalise lifetime warranted tools with an engraver or similar, does it affect warranty claims? I've not been in this situation, but wondered if makers might try it ("prior damage") as an out-clause.