OP
Travelover
Elite Member
Like I've said before, I love HF, but I wouldn't buy a parachute there.8 years using HF tools and he's still alive!!!![]()
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Like I've said before, I love HF, but I wouldn't buy a parachute there.8 years using HF tools and he's still alive!!!![]()
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I'm drowning in an excess of junk tools that Dad accumulated cheap from yard sales, every one needs some repair. First I was going to build more storage but then I figured out owning and storing less stuff, buying when needed, improves my life.
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Well then you have bigger problems! :laughing:It is also quicker to find the tool you need in the store than under heaps of old tools![]()
You have no idea.quicker to find the tool you need in the store than under heaps of old tools![]()
You have no idea.. I joke that Dad would go to yard sales at closing time and offer $1 to $5 for 'everything remaining'. To bring back and store at the ranch. For 40 years. I don't think that's much of an exaggeration. He was ready for the next Depression.
After I inherited the place (well bought it out of the estate) I started moving unusable stuff out. Ivy had grown into these stored rolls of fiberglass insulation plus I didn't have any application for them, for example. Basement, attic, barns, sheds, all had 'treasures' like this.
I posted the photo below, on here in 2004 (illustrating what I use for a 'truck'). In a year of hauling I narrowed things down to what I thought I might use.
Now today anything I haven't used in my 16 years here goes the way of those broken belt sanders whenever I trip over them. There are some nice things like the 75 lb vises, and most of the old tools were tradesman-quality back when they worked properly, but I no longer have patience to start projects where the first two-thirds is reconditioning the old tools I need. I get more accomplished by replacing the old tool with a HF purchase and finishing the project in a reasonable time.
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Went back to the old thread you referenced... love your post on the topic! My rationale on HF or other vs. 'top Brand' quality is based on my expected frequency of use. My empirical data on my tool purchases and use has led me to this conclusion.You have no idea.. I joke that Dad would go to yard sales at closing time and offer $1 to $5 for 'everything remaining'. To bring back and store at the ranch. For 40 years. I don't think that's much of an exaggeration. He was ready for the next Depression.
After I inherited the place (well bought it out of the estate) I started moving unusable stuff out. Ivy had grown into these stored rolls of fiberglass insulation plus I didn't have any application for them, for example. Basement, attic, barns, sheds, all had 'treasures' like this.
I posted the photo below, on here in 2004 (illustrating what I use for a 'truck'). In a year of hauling I narrowed things down to what I thought I might use.
Now today anything I haven't used in my 16 years here goes the way of those broken belt sanders whenever I trip over them. There are some nice things like the 75 lb vises, and most of the old tools were tradesman-quality back when they worked properly, but I no longer have patience to start projects where the first two-thirds is reconditioning the old tools I need. I get more accomplished by replacing the old tool with a HF purchase and finishing the project in a reasonable time.
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You nailed it. In his last years Dad had this Dorothea Lange - WPA photo on the wall in his breakfast nook.
We think alike, thanks.Went back to the old thread you referenced... love your post on the topic! My rationale on HF or other vs. 'top Brand' quality is based on my expected frequency of use. My empirical data on my tool purchases and use has led me to this conclusion.
I learned something a while back that is fundamental psychology: hoarding or clutter are the evidence of decisions deferred.mom and dad saved everything! And, unfortunately, so do I. It drives my wife nuts.