paulsharvey
Elite Member
Dam hostage situation in the middle of a natural disaster. They should arrest the teamster leaders for thatWow!! Unless they were getting paid "peanuts" (which I highly doubt) 62% is a Humongous raise!!
Dam hostage situation in the middle of a natural disaster. They should arrest the teamster leaders for thatWow!! Unless they were getting paid "peanuts" (which I highly doubt) 62% is a Humongous raise!!
The 17.5 inch rivet gun is on sale for 16.99 until the 13th. I bought mine two or three years ago and while I don't use it all of that much, it never fails me.This one? I bought some SS rivets recently and my little rivet gun is tough to use on these rivets. This looks like a good deal and I've wondered how well they work. Thanks.
teamsters have nothing to do with the longshoreman strike. Totally different union.Dam hostage situation in the middle of a natural disaster. They should arrest the teamster leaders for that
Sharing pics of this project would be a great thread.With the large rivets you can pop about anything together. I'm working on the front and rear bulkheads for our Generac propane fired house generator that the cabinet went south on (rusted out) and I was not about to buy another 20KW generator for 13 grand so I special ordered a new cabinet from Generac. The new cabinet is aluminum, not steel but the bulkheads are NLA and both were rusted out on the bottom edge so I fabbed up new bottoms on my press brake and I'm pop riveting the new bottoms to the existing tops. The metal is too thin to even braze let alone MIG so the pop rivets are the correct solution. I would have fabbed the entire bulkheads but the existing ones have threaded inserts in them that align with the aluminum cabinet. I figured 5 grand for a new cabinet was cheaper though I did have to wait for 2 months for Generac to make it for me.
The bulkheads are about done so all that is really left is reassembling everything and I took pictures of all the wiring and terminals and there is a bunch. Gonna pour a new concrete pad for it as well. The old pad cracked, this one won't. Putting concrete screen in the cement and I finally get to use the 3 point cement mixer I bought 20 years ago. I knew at some point I'd use it...lol
Winter is coming and we need the house standby as power goes south here in the winter, quite often.
For the life of me, I don't understand why Generac made them with steel cabinets instead of aluminum. Being out in the weather, they corrode. The Township has one by the Township hall and it's rusting away as well.
The diesel fired Generac I have to run the shop came with an aluminum enclosure, go figure.
Same the big set of Icons works well on large snap rings. Only way to know is buy it and try it at HF.Another HF tool(s) that I really like and work well are the Icon internal and external snap ring pliers. While not for smaller snap rings (HF sells an interchangeable set with removable internal and external jaws for smaller snap rings, the Icon set is for larger snap rings like you will encounter on tractors and medium to large trucks.
It's a nice pair of pliers with substantial handles and the end pins are hardened and tempered. Just used them on my M9000 Kubota to remove the large internal and external snap rings that secure the parts in the outboard planetaries. No way you can remove them with any other means except the correct (and heavy duty, not small) snap ring pliers simply because they are recessed into the assemblies so even a flat blade screwdriver is unable to reach them.
Be apprised, they aren't a cheap date, but compared to Snap-On or Mac, they are.
My experience too. I broke the 3/8" ratchet in the $10 set when I was on my hands and knees under the tractor pushing on the ratchet. No way that could have been extreme force!Hated the cheap ratchet set.
The sockets are fine, the ratchet broke first time I used it on something that was a little tight.
My older ratchet, using the socket from that set removed the nut easily.
Wow!! Unless they were getting paid "peanuts" (which I highly doubt) 62% is a Humongous raise!!
I have a complete set of the old USA made Craftsman sockets, ratchets, wrenches, and screwdrivers in the shop. I’ve had them since the 1980s and nothing has broken yet. But I also have sets of the cheap HF tools in the vehicles, and house garage for emergency and occasional use. You can’t beat the price of the Pittsburgh tools for those purposes.My experience too. I broke the 3/8" ratchet in the $10 set when I was on my hands and knees under the tractor pushing on the ratchet. No way that could have been extreme force!
I returned the entire set for exchange and soon broke this second ratchet. Substituted an old Taiwan ratchet into that set and haven't broken it, over several years now.
But I get out my ancient Craftsman or Plumb socket sets when I have a real project. And start with the HF 1/2" extendable ratchet when I expect some force will be needed.
I like my HF aluminum 24" pipe wrenches but the teeth are starting to get mashed flat after my first project using them replacing several ancient water lines.I like the 24" pipe wrench, though it does have some play. I have 2 of them and they get put to use.