
And your spouse doesn't have to SAY the words "I have a headache?"
You know you have a lot of tools around the house.
I thought I'd learned a lot when I bought the Range. Now I"m learning more, but I'll need to as I still plan on building a log home sometime in the next year or so, if this big old place sells without my losing my shirt in the deal. If will be fun.

This has been a year of changes and decisions. A promotion at work which gave me some money for lofty projects, just not the time as it required a lot more travel. Yet I've managed to find a little time to access myself and what skills I had on my own, or could learn. And learn I did.
Home on the Range tool lessons
LIVE SIMPLE. START SIMPLE
A SHOP VAC perhaps. And yes, it WILL suck up a dead mouse, that diamond earring you've been looking for AND an entire Hostess Snowball. But you don't want to.
T0 accompany that, you can add some COMMON FASTENERS which come pre-stripped for easy over torquing.
NOW ADD OUR BASIC SUPPLIES
WIRE WHEEL: Cleans paint off of bolts and other things quick as a wink so when they drop to the floor they are even harder to see. Can also be used on those college era cookie sheets that you really need to throw away.
SKILL SAW: "Skill" saw can by an oxymoron. A portable cutting tool used to make things 1/4 inch too short.
ADJUSTABLE WRENCH: Phase one of the detailed process of completely stripping a bolt head. Not to be mistaken for an Adjustable Wench which was popular during Medieval Home Remodeling.
PLIERS: Used to attempt to remove said bolt heads. Can also be used to attempt to pull corkscrew from wine bottle after mangling Roberta X's wine opener. (I told you Tam, we needed C4 on that thing.)
BELT SANDER: When hand sanding is not enough, this handy little electric job can turn the most minor touch up jobs into a complete home finishing project as quick as you can say, a la' George Jetson, "Jane - STOP this crazy thing".SAW - The Congress of tools, it starts with a good idea and a straight course, then turns every which way due to lack of direction and a tendency to lean to the Left, ending up with something that doesn't even begin to look like the original plan.
VISE-GRIPS: When heated up during any welding project, they make handy branding tools.
OXYACETYLENE TORCH: When you thought that setting fire to your kitchen towel was going out of style, get one of these! Useful for lighting any flammable object in your shop on fire in only seconds.
TABLE SAW: A large stationary power tool commonly used as a shop trebuchet, to fling hard objects into that wall you just dry walled.
FLOOR LAMPS: When the low/med/high button shorts out to only the 747 landing light position, it can be used to find the wire brushed bolts or interrogate prisoners.PHILLIPS SCREWDRIVER: Useful for poking a hole in the top of the brownies to see if they are done. There's a rumor they can be used remove screws but it's only a rumor.
SCRATCH-AWL: Rumored to be good for making a pilot hole for drilling. However, true to its name, when you put it in your tool belt, it scratches ALL, including the wearer.
STRAIGHT SCREWDRIVER:A tool for opening large paint cans that you will need after using the belt sander.
WIRE CUTTERS: Common divining rod to determine if electricity is nearby.
HOSE CUTTER:A tool used to make hoses too short (I won't even touch the subject as to why women can't measure).
HAMMER: Occasional tool of violence in places where guns are outlawed. It is well known that the hammer is commonly used in other states to destroy the areas immediately surrounding where you are trying to hit.
UTILITY KNIFE: Handy for use in cutting open packages from the UPS guy. Works equally as well on refund checks, plastic bottles or small plastic reloading supplies that you really needed.
Best left out of the hands of those prone to "packaging rage".
TWEEZERS: Forget those stray eyebrow hairs, this thing can actually remove wood splinters!
PHONE: Tool for calling your shooty buddies for help. Do NOT lose this item.
E-Z OUT BOLT AND STUD EXTRACTOR: Viagra couldn't make this tool any harder. Harder than any drill bit ever made, it will snap off into bolt holes faster than you can say "hey, what are you doing tonight?"
PRYBAR- useful for that cookie that just does NOT want to let loose from the pan after baking.TROUBLE LIGHT - What my friends probably call the headlights of my truck as they hit their driveway. The home remodelers very own tanning booth. Sometimes known as a "drop light", from the tendency to drop it on a hard surface and break it one day past its warranty, it's a good source of vitamin D, the sunshine vitamin which will help with S.A.D. as well as that urge to take the pry bar and . . . .
Its main purpose however it to consume expensive 40 watt light bulbs at a rate equal or greater than all the .30-06 cartridges used in WW II.

DUST MASK - useful for drywall or that blind date your well meaning friends set you up with.
16 comments:
If you weren't working so much Lu and I would tempt you to bring your tools and skills out to southern Utah with unlimited ammunition, all the Guinness you could drink and fire grilled beef.
Reminds me of my tool box.
I'm starting to think I acted a little hasty and would like you forget about that time where I took back the marriage proposal.
Cookies I love cookies.
Now I don't want you to think that if we where to get married that it would be bacause I was after your tools.
Just one of the pictures caught my eye.
Such pretty eyes.
Just something for you to think about,
Josh
Nice little set of tool definitions. And those green eyes are knockout.
Well, you really haven't met me yet. and I would settle for a long passionate engagement.
Hope you had sweet dreams.
Now if P. L. Robertson had licensed the Robertson screw to Henry Ford, the world would be a much nicer place with far fewer stripped screws. Or about as many, but stripped screws with nice round concentric holes to drill for a screw extractor.
Thanks for the laughs. :-)
You forgot to mention a reliable car. One to make six trips to the hardware store in one day = all for the same project.
It sure helps me.
Thanks for the post.
You might want to think about the log home. They can involve a LOT of ongoing maintenance to keep them up.
Sounds just like every project I take on. I've been known to use quite a few of those tools just to change the water filter!! I love torches and power tools.
Mr. McGuire: I want to say one word to you. Just one word.
Dan: Yes, sir.
Mr. McGuire: Are you listening?
Dan: Yes, I am.
Mr. McGuire: Helmspar.
You need more tools. To whit:
Router: a high-speed, gyroscopic cutting implement used chiefly with a straightedge (q.v.) for straightening and squaring up the wobbly cuts you made with your saw. (q.v.).
Also handy for distressing furniture -- whether you mean to or not.
Mark Alger
You forgot suture kit ... or is that just at our house.
In my own defense, while the network cabling job required three stitches, I got away with butterfly bandages after installing the new bathroom lights.
I wish I would have thought about those dust mask on a few blind dates I USE to let my sister set me up on.
Speaking of your eyes, I just checked your list and didn't see anything about safety glasses. Tsk tsk.
And about the log home -- what I have heard is that dry logs are the key to long-term success with this approach. Enough so, that I'll seriously consider Anderson manufactured logs when the time comes for mine.
Robert, dry lumber works great. My 1931 double garage was a post and beam design. I re-engineered it to a 20 x 28 open space floor plan. This left me with about 800 board feet of 1931 scrap wood. Took about 30 minutes to burn it up in the outdoor fire place.
And don't think Brigid needs safety glasses. All she'd need to do is bat those greens eyes and she find a line of guys willing to tackle any job she has.
WIRE CUTTERS: Common divining rod to determine if electricity is nearby.
I have a pair of wire cutters with a notch burned into them that attests to the truth of this statement. And which I keep around just to remind myself of the truth of this statement.
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