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Ozzy, you think Craftsman is cheap stuff?
Ummmm....BWAHAHAAHHAHAAHAHA!!!!!!! RB |
Craftsman is in the lowest end here Scootz, only stuff lower cost it
the Chinese gear that the chain harware like Bunnings carry. Same here. Ryobi and Craftsman are usually considered pretty disposable. Some folks see them as okay for a boat, but we're not talking about a LOT of money to buy a real tool. To someone like Scotty Potti an extra 100 dollars is a month of vittles, so he's not in this discussion. RB |
Craftsman is very popular here for home use and the weekend DIY crowd.
like I said, they sell 4 'grades'. Yeah, and the best for is losers who made it to 8th grade!!! Bwahahahahaha! RB |
Bob feels he has to buy '' high end'' expensive tools to make up for
his lack of skills. I wonder if Scotty Potti can explain how a Makita drill aids in "skill" over a Ryobi. Does the Makita have gyros to help drill straighter???? This oughta be good! Scotty Potti is blasted again! RB |
Scotty
He's wasting her money! Hey, she bought the Makita 6226 for herself! RB |
Well I used the drill today, works nice, good torque. Guess we'll see
how long it lasts. Scotty OzOne wrote in message ... On Sun, 7 Nov 2004 16:17:45 -0500, "Scott Vernon" scribbled thusly: Craftsman is very popular here for home use and the weekend DIY crowd. like I said, they sell 4 'grades'. Ok, good, better, and best. Depends what and how you use them. Bob feels he has to buy '' high end'' expensive tools to make up for his lack of skills. Scotty He's wasting her money! Oz1...of the 3 twins. I welcome you to crackerbox palace,We've been expecting you. |
Well I used the drill today, works nice, good torque.
Anyone test a drill lately that doesn't work nice and have good torque? Scotty Potty, you're an idiot. RB |
In article , OzOne wrote:
On 07 Nov 2004 20:16:21 GMT, (Bobsprit) scribbled thusly: Bought a Craftsman ( who knows where they're really built?), then saw a cordless drill / saw / light combo and bought that for the boat. CRAFTSMAN!!! Bwahahahahaha!!! No, really? Bwahahahahahahha! Scotty Potti is the worst kind of dumbass...a cheap one! RB Ummmm Bubbles have you ever looked at the economics of buying cheap non precision tools? Realistically you can buy a new one every two years and be no worse off than having bought an expensive tool over its lifespan with the bonus that you get new innovations as they come onto the market. I think this approach has its benefits too. Needed to cut a pile of roofing iron, didn't want to get metal dust in my good saws so I bought a Chinese 7 1/4" circ saw with a 2 year warranty. I killed it on the last sheet I needed to cut - smoke escaped. Took it back and got another one :-) That's now my 'butcher' saw I let other people use and if it gets dropped off the rafters, so what. Ditto with a small angle grinder. The good Metabo stays in my hands. PDW |
Ditto with a small angle grinder. The good Metabo stays in my hands.
Yeah, only diff is that you already own GOOD tools for your use and beat up on the substandard stuff. Scotty Potty only owns the cheap stuff. RB |
i've done the same
to burn out tools you actually have to use them and use them hard as it seems you do. another version for some seems to be as follows: picked up a grinder at the home depot (makita) a last minute purchase that i needed at that moment. arrived to the boat. opened the box and it was clearly used and burnt out...................... gf. "Peter Wiley" wrote in message . .. I think this approach has its benefits too. Needed to cut a pile of roofing iron, didn't want to get metal dust in my good saws so I bought a Chinese 7 1/4" circ saw with a 2 year warranty. I killed it on the last sheet I needed to cut - smoke escaped. Took it back and got another one :-) That's now my 'butcher' saw I let other people use and if it gets dropped off the rafters, so what. Ditto with a small angle grinder. The good Metabo stays in my hands. PDW |
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