40_acre_mule
Silver Member
I hope this is a good forum for the subject...
I have a pretty decent collection of tools, but I never stop shopping. I also never stop learning, so often I find that I need a tool I've never used/had before.
I have felt a need for a torque wrench for some time. But I never got around to buying one until the SECOND time I had a stuck bolt on one of the blades for my finishing mower. (I have a habit of REEAALLLYY torquing down on stuff). DW will testify that I screw the cap down on the jelly jar to about 75 ft/lbs. Anyway, I decided that saving the time it takes to get the finishing mower on the trailer and hauling it down to the dealer to remove the stuck bolt would justify the purchase of the wrench. So, now I can tighten the bolts to the torque specified in the manual. I haven't used the mower yet, so I don't know if the blades are gonna fly off or not. 55 ft/lbs just doesn't seem very tight to me.
After the fight I had with the first stuck bolt, I also decided an impact wrench would be really handy. However, I always thought that required air compressors and hoses and Lord only knows what else. The one big area of tools I haven't invested in is air operated devices.
Imagine my surprise when I spotted an electric impact wrench at the local Orange and White home improvement store. It is made by DeWalt (I have several good tools by them). It ran about $160. I made an impulse purchase. Well, it didn't get the second stuck bolt out (I told ya I like to crank them bolts down), but I tried it on a few other old bolts and they came loose pretty easily.
Then, yesterday, I had to change a tire on my Dodge Ram. The impact wrench worked like a charm. I think I'll keep it.
Fortunately, after years of criticism from DW about how many different kinds of hammers I have, she now sings a different tune. I have finally pulled out just exactly the right obscure tool for some specified purpose to fix something for her often enough, that she started to realize that the phrase "the right tool for the right job" is not just an excuse to buy more tools.
I have a pretty decent collection of tools, but I never stop shopping. I also never stop learning, so often I find that I need a tool I've never used/had before.
I have felt a need for a torque wrench for some time. But I never got around to buying one until the SECOND time I had a stuck bolt on one of the blades for my finishing mower. (I have a habit of REEAALLLYY torquing down on stuff). DW will testify that I screw the cap down on the jelly jar to about 75 ft/lbs. Anyway, I decided that saving the time it takes to get the finishing mower on the trailer and hauling it down to the dealer to remove the stuck bolt would justify the purchase of the wrench. So, now I can tighten the bolts to the torque specified in the manual. I haven't used the mower yet, so I don't know if the blades are gonna fly off or not. 55 ft/lbs just doesn't seem very tight to me.
After the fight I had with the first stuck bolt, I also decided an impact wrench would be really handy. However, I always thought that required air compressors and hoses and Lord only knows what else. The one big area of tools I haven't invested in is air operated devices.
Imagine my surprise when I spotted an electric impact wrench at the local Orange and White home improvement store. It is made by DeWalt (I have several good tools by them). It ran about $160. I made an impulse purchase. Well, it didn't get the second stuck bolt out (I told ya I like to crank them bolts down), but I tried it on a few other old bolts and they came loose pretty easily.
Then, yesterday, I had to change a tire on my Dodge Ram. The impact wrench worked like a charm. I think I'll keep it.
Fortunately, after years of criticism from DW about how many different kinds of hammers I have, she now sings a different tune. I have finally pulled out just exactly the right obscure tool for some specified purpose to fix something for her often enough, that she started to realize that the phrase "the right tool for the right job" is not just an excuse to buy more tools.