Baby-steps are fine when we're changing the course of government. Small course changes are necessary sometimes so you don't throw the whole vessel off kilter. Paul Krugman believes that the deal is an unmitigated disaster.
It is, of course, a political catastrophe for Democrats, who just a few weeks ago seemed to have Republicans on the run over their plan to dismantle Medicare; now Mr. Obama has thrown all that away.It's okay, Paul. The sky is not falling.
In other news, I found a vise at the auction Saturday. A big red vise and I've mounted it on my bench. It's marked Sears, but the baseplate is stamped Taiwan. I've lubed it and lagged it down. It will be a counterpoint to the smaller vise that's mounted on the other end of the bench.
From doing a little research, it appears that I've got a late '60s vintage vise made by Wilton vise company. It's marked Sears, with a model number 506.5182. Wilton sold those vises under their brand as the Columbian model, and sold them to Sears as a private brand.
Before anyone hollers at me for using lag screws instead of properly bolting it down, it's on a light-duty bench and will get nowhere near the stress that I might subject it to if it were on a proper bench. Those lag screws will hold it just fine.
I picked up my vise at a flea market ten or so years ago. It's a Wilton 3" machinist's vise still in their catalog at $500, I paid $10. The screw was rusted in place. It took me all of fifteen minutes to free it up, wire brush all the rust off and smear some white lithium grease on the internal workings. It's really a great little vise and I'm glad to have it.
ReplyDeleteI've got one of those too! :-) LOVE IT!!!
ReplyDeletePawpaw said:.......the Huff Post says that it's going to be the end of Keynesian economics....
ReplyDeleteI doubt it, but we can hope.....
I have one of these 4" vise 506.5182...how much could I sell it?
ReplyDelete