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havent figured out that you only need a small box for 90% of jobs,
You _can_ do 90% of what is to be done with what I carry on my belt. With my little toolbag, you can do 99%. But just because one can skin and tan a deer with teeth alone, doesn't mean one _enjoys_ doing it that way...... |
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![]() "Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message ... (Alan Horowitz) wrote in message . com... havent figured out that you only need a small box for 90% of jobs, You _can_ do 90% of what is to be done with what I carry on my belt. With my little toolbag, you can do 99%. But just because one can skin and tan a deer with teeth alone, doesn't mean one _enjoys_ doing it that way...... Point taken - and if you were going into the woods to catch a deer, (or a bunny rabbit) you would at least have a skinning knife with you and then take the skin back home to tan - the same with repairs, I have a swiss army knife on my belt and I can do a huge number of repairs with that. And if you are on a "boat" then you wont have to drive 15 miles to get the right tool, would you. So, if you want to lug a 20Kg toolbox up and down "stairs" then feel free to do so - dont expect to do it any other way, because there isnt one. Perhaps the OP could spend more time at the gym? ;-) I, too, find that my little Gerber Tool solves well over 90% of my 'occasional' tool needs. While there's hardly a tool on it that I would use for a particular job if I had the 'real' tool at hand; the utility of having all those tools on my belt--all of the time--is liberating. jak Oh, and BTW - on a "boat" you are unlikely to find that a new piece of equipment needing an unusual tool has miraculously(sp) appeared overnight - wish I had it that easy!..... Andrew |
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"jakdedert" wrote in message
.. . I, too, find that my little Gerber Tool solves well over 90% of my 'occasional' tool needs. While there's hardly a tool on it that I would use for a particular job if I had the 'real' tool at hand; the utility of having all those tools on my belt--all of the time--is liberating. I wonder how many of those the TSA owns, now? Rich "Honest, I forgot it was on my belt" S. |
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Swiss Army Knife ?
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Alex Rodriguez wrote:
In article , says... ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of tool junkie genetic coding. Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells ("stairs", to you land pukes) Better approach? Two cases and make two trips. --------- Alex COME-ON, guys! He came to rec.AVIATION.HOMEBUILT asking this question. What he wants to know is: A) whether to use a laminar or turbulent airfoil, and what's the proper wing loading for a toolbox? B) would a certified or auto-conversion engine be more appropriate? C) composite, aluminum, or tube and rag? E) electric or manual trim? F) circuit breakers or fuses? Now. Could somebody help the guy out, please! 8*) -- http://www.ernest.isa-geek.org/ "Ignorance is mankinds normal state, alleviated by information and experience." Veeduber |
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In article , Alan
Horowitz writes ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of tool junkie genetic coding. Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells ("stairs", to you land pukes) Better approach? Get the bosun to carry your tools or help you carry your tools. Webbing strop and ships winch. Check out each job before starting and take less tools in a smaller case. Keep your own tools at home if the shipping company supplies tools and use your own tools for homers when off tour. See about your addiction. :-) I managed a whole week once with a pinching driver! I am a professed tool junkie as well but my van has no organisation aids in it so there are tools and materials stuffed in the back of it so much I can't find the tools I need. -- Z Remove all Zeds in e-mail address to reply. |
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Z wrote in message ...
In article , Alan Horowitz writes ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of tool junkie genetic coding. Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells ("stairs", to you land pukes) Better approach? Get the bosun to carry your tools or help you carry your tools. Webbing strop and ships winch. Check out each job before starting and take less tools in a smaller case. Keep your own tools at home if the shipping company supplies tools and use your own tools for homers when off tour. See about your addiction. :-) I managed a whole week once with a pinching driver! I am a professed tool junkie as well but my van has no organisation aids in it so there are tools and materials stuffed in the back of it so much I can't find the tools I need. Yep, I am a tool junkie as well - but I only carry the bare minimum in the van, paranoid about them being stolen, and commercial insurance is just toooo much. Lets face it, he who dies with the most tools/test equipment wins......(not sure what you win, I just know that you do). BTW - whats the most obscure specialised tool you own - you know, something that was acquired in a moment of madness and never got used - (this specifically exludes power tools, they are in a special "sacred objects" category)...and where can I get a micro lathe cheap for turning up capacitor shafts.... de VK3BFA Andrew |
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