Hookers and blowWhat to buy a woodworker / carpenter for his 70th bday? Especially since he’s got most of it.
Dad’s bday is quickly coming up, and I’m at a loss for what to get the man that ‘needs nothing and has everything he needs’.
Hookers and blowWhat to buy a woodworker / carpenter for his 70th bday? Especially since he’s got most of it.
Dad’s bday is quickly coming up, and I’m at a loss for what to get the man that ‘needs nothing and has everything he needs’.
He wants to buy an engine hoist so he can help me remove the fence posts....that has a hook...Hookers and blow
A Hi-Lift jack is great for pulling fence posts. He could borrow mine.He wants to buy an engine hoist so he can help me remove the fence posts....that has a hook...
That seems better suited. Lots of ugly leverage on an engine hoist (and pretty damn slow).A Hi-Lift jack is great for pulling fence posts. He could borrow mine.
That was my recommendation also, and they're MUCH cheaper. But for some reason he feels the engine hoist is better...I don't believe it is, plus I have no place to keep it.A Hi-Lift jack is great for pulling fence posts. He could borrow mine.
I thought the standard contractor approach was sawzall just below the surface and set the new posts 10" over? Throw some soil over the old posts and job is done.That was my recommendation also, and they're MUCH cheaper. But for some reason he feels the engine hoist is better...I don't believe it is, plus I have no place to keep it.
All videos with the Hi-Lift jack seem to show it really tipping at the higher end...not sure. Need to figure something out as I need to pull 5 posts in April.
Thanks I'll try and convince him again. I have no need / space for an engine hoist...regardless of how good a 'deal' it is. I don't need it.Trust me on fence posts ( ex farmer , 9 million posts in my past) hi-lift , farmall jack , 3ft 2x6 and 10ft of chain . Two or three wraps of chain are post , 2x6 so tbe jack doesn’t sink , and go. Engine hoist has legs that are always in the way , won’t work at the corner , has to be assembled on site and you will bend the boom . Wrong tool for the job.
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Work is what we are obliged to do.I use hand tools everyday, all day. No romantic ideas of stunning Lie Nelson planes sitting on a shelf. When I get home I really don't want to see a hand tool. The downside of doing a "hobby" as a life long occupation.
Mom turns 90 in July , all she wants is a dinner with family at a cheap local.
I told her i would fly the kids in , so there's another 2k for dinner. She said she hopes to live till July , and see the kids. I told her, well, they still need to show up for the funeral so I'm still down 2k , but I will bill that against the estate. I'm known in the family as the compassionate one.
I can't figure out birthdays, especially for women.What to buy a woodworker / carpenter for his 70th bday? Especially since he’s got most of it.
Dad’s bday is quickly coming up, and I’m at a loss for what to get the man that ‘needs nothing and has everything he needs’.
It languishes in a corner almost unused since my 4x4 days if you're out St Marys way. Just saying...Thanks I'll try and convince him again. I have no need / space for an engine hoist...regardless of how good a 'deal' it is. I don't need it.
But he may, and he likes to justify his purchases somehow.
Good drive to get out of the house for a few hours in glorious silence. Thanks!It languishes in a corner almost unused since my 4x4 days if you're out St Marys way. Just saying...
Work is what we are obliged to do.
Play is what we are not obliged to do.
The cabinet maker goes fishing and the fisherman builds a cabinet.
Are the posts set in 4ft of concrete or just in the dirt?He wants to buy an engine hoist so he can help me remove the fence posts....that has a hook...
When I redo an old fence, I find recycling the old holes to be more work than poking new ones. So I just just snip the old posts off at the ground and poke new holes.Are the posts set in 4ft of concrete or just in the dirt?
I removed about 8 posts from my old fence using some wood and a fulcrum method, but they were only in about 18" of concrete, so the fulcrum method worked pretty easy.
I was helping a buddy remove a chain link fence one time. We were putting a building there so everything needed to come out. Most of the posts weren't a big deal. Steel posts set in ~4'x10" of concrete but manageable. One wouldn't move at all. Brought in a forklift. Still nothing. Tried drilling a few deep holes to split the concrete off. No luck. Ended up digging and using a concrete saw to chunk the concrete. For an unknown reason, that post was set with about a yard of concrete. It belled out and went under a slab on grade section of the existing building.Are the posts set in 4ft of concrete or just in the dirt?
I removed about 8 posts from my old fence using some wood and a fulcrum method, but they were only in about 18" of concrete, so the fulcrum method worked pretty easy.