Referencing some recent comments on the previous post.
Harbor Freight, or as I call it, Hobo Freight, is a constant in my shop. I buy a lot of Harbor Freight tools, because they work.
My buddy, Jay, who died in December, had his A&P license and ran a small manufacturing business where he made tools for the helicopter maintenance trade. Jay didn't mind spending money on tools, that is how he made his living. His machine shop had big lathes, mills, all the high-dollar stuff. In the welding room, I happen to notice one day that every bench had a cheap, Hobo Freight angle grinder on the bench.
I asked him about it.
"They work," he said. "And when they quit, I go buy another one for $15.00." He appreciated high quality tools but realized the value in a cheap angle grinder that would work for him for two or three years. Sometimes there is value in cheap tools.
Twenty years ago, I didn't trust battery tools. If I could find a plug and string an extension cord, I could work all day. Nowadays I don't care to work all day. When the battery needs a recharge, I take a break.
I can still do a full days work, it just takes me most of the week.
Any man who is 70 and works as hard as he did when he was 35, didn't do much when he was 35.
No comments:
Post a Comment