luvmytoolz
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Then a couple of weeks ago I stumbled on this on Temu for 6USD and threw it in my basket not expecting much.
If you use a hand plane and currently unscrew your chipbreaker using the lever cap or an undersized screwdriver, I recommend putting one of these of your stocking filler list this year![]()
No problemThe search engines suck on those Chinese markets.
Might you have a link for it on Temu?
I’ll get one for our woodworker son. What the heck, one for me also.
I just saw this again and it reminded me of an update on my thoughts here.This is from the DeWalt Service Center in York, Pennsylvania. And while I've always presumed they were just owned by B&D/DeWalt, I'm not sure. The masthead of my invoice says "Black & Decker / DeWalt" but the sellers line lists a local company. So perhaps B&D uses local companies to operate service centers? I don't really know but I was surprised when I asked the crew there if DeWalt had moved HQ out of Baltimore and they didn't know - I would have thought that they would know that, but I didn't worry about it.
Good eye. I bought a wood float like shown in your pic at Lowe's for similar super cheap price.Was at my local Ace Hardware today and noticed they had these Marshalltown 12x5" Wood Floats on Clearance for $1.80 each.
It is called the Australian tax for good reason. Actually anyone living in New Zealand is worse off than us so we can be grateful for small mercies I guess. Try sending a parcel from Oz to NZ like I used to do when I was involved in manufacturing automatic blast gates and you need a gold plated credit card to pay for it. The Tasman Sea between the two countries is reputed to be the most expensive bit of water in the world to freight anything across.Just because! ;-)
I can see where sending gates or large items could be incredibly expensive, but that hasn't been my experience for the smaller cartons we ship anyway. We have a large Australian chain we look after and have done several major roll-outs to their NZ sites, and on average it's between $45-$65 per carton depending on where it's going and size/weight of the carton. Sending the same cartons to anywhere in Oz usually run about the $30-$45 range as a comparison.It is called the Australian tax for good reason. Actually anyone living in New Zealand is worse off than us so we can be grateful for small mercies I guess. Try sending a parcel from Oz to NZ like I used to do when I was involved in manufacturing automatic blast gates and you need a gold plated credit card to pay for it. The Tasman Sea between the two countries is reputed to be the most expensive bit of water in the world to freight anything across.
I think Hawaii (from the US mainland) has a similar “tax”. I had a college roommate from Hawaii in 1967 and he said that many things were much more expensive in Hawaii. Luckily (for him) his parents were exceedingly wealthy and none of those “taxes” stopped them from shopping.I can see where sending gates or large items could be incredibly expensive, but that hasn't been my experience for the smaller cartons we ship anyway. We have a large Australian chain we look after and have done several major roll-outs to their NZ sites, and on average it's between $45-$65 per carton depending on where it's going and size/weight of the carton. Sending the same cartons to anywhere in Oz usually run about the $30-$45 range as a comparison.
Paying close to $1k for a small "nothing special" blade is just obscene though regardless of shipping costs and taxes.
I use that whenever I'm resawing a board. The scratch awl point makes a perfect referenceI am a self-confessed shopaholic and I have been on a bit of a binge recently
Amongst other things and after a lot of trials with cheaper and DIY options, I finally bit the bullet and bought this Bridge City center marking gauge. It wasn't cheap but sheesh it's a delight to work with so far
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sorry!@Stevenski Aren't we all!
That's a really sweet marking gauge, another tool I didn't know I now need badly! ;-)
Gosh, I certainly hope this guy didn't tell you that pineapples were a tree-based fruit.I think Hawaii (from the US mainland) has a similar “tax”. I had a college roommate from Hawaii in 1967 and he said that many things were much more expensive in Hawaii. Luckily (for him) his parents were exceedingly wealthy and none of those “taxes” stopped them from shopping.
(He also claimed that we did not know what pineapple or bananas taste like because we did not have tree-ripened fruit. Apparently the tree-ripened fruit had an entirely different taste and were sweeter. He refused to eat either bananas or pineapples that were available in Syracuse, NY).