I ordered some keystone females. Flying jacks are gross but hopefully they work out. The keystone needs less cable (half the width). Thanks for your help.
I ordered some keystone females. Flying jacks are gross but hopefully they work out. The keystone needs less cable (half the width). Thanks for your help.
I don't own of those flying jacks but if I ever had one in my tool box, I would do everthing possible not to use it.I ordered some keystone females. Flying jacks are gross but hopefully they work out. The keystone needs less cable (half the width). Thanks for your help.
How did the plate cutting work out?
Or did I miss that post?
A guy I knew was a pack rat and advised looking up for storage. So much space not being used.Seems my skid plate cutting which led to a garage overhaul has now freed up enough space in the garage for a small gym space. I'm laying down some foam flooring tiles from an online gym equipment place but now need to get space saving equipment as there’s not that much room there. No room for a barbell or squat rack for example but adjustable dumb bells are fine. Maybe a fold away bench and some resistance bands. Plenty of space for a gym mat for stretching and the like. It’s not a lot but more than we had before.
What’s good to have for space saving equipment?
I would recommend using some rubber flooring (horse stall mats from Co-Op or others work well) instead of the foam mats. Foam just doesn't hold up well and it's not as nice to walk on while exercising (it's always a bit squishy and just meh).Seems my skid plate cutting which led to a garage overhaul has now freed up enough space in the garage for a small gym space. I'm laying down some foam flooring tiles from an online gym equipment place but now need to get space saving equipment as there’s not that much room there. No room for a barbell or squat rack for example but adjustable dumb bells are fine. Maybe a fold away bench and some resistance bands. Plenty of space for a gym mat for stretching and the like. It’s not a lot but more than we had before.
What’s good to have for space saving equipment?
A jointer is helpful if you are crafting in wood (furniture, cutting boards, etc). For gc, I would very rarely use it. A hand power planer is smaller and more useful for gc stuff imo.Doing some cleaning house and dad decided to leave this behind at my place:
Is this even worth keeping for general contracting work? It's just taking up space and he's got an 8" that he wants to keep when I told him to sell the 8" and keep this 6.125".
A guy I knew was a pack rat and advised looking up for storage. So much space not being used.
At 6 amps thats not too strong. For pine maybe.Doing some cleaning house and dad decided to leave this behind at my place:
Is this even worth keeping for general contracting work? It's just taking up space and he's got an 8" that he wants to keep when I told him to sell the 8" and keep this 6.125".
Those things scare the crap out of me. Push down on a piece of wood as it passes over a wood chipper.A jointer is helpful if you are crafting in wood (furniture, cutting boards, etc). For gc, I would very rarely use it. A hand power planer is smaller and more useful for gc stuff imo.
Then you wouldn't like the 16" one we have.Those things scare the crap out of me. Push down on a piece of wood as it passes over a wood chipper.
Like most power tools. Pay attention to cutting forces and where you and the work will end up if something slips. Don't put yourself in a position where the sharp bits/projectile can get you or anyone else.Those things scare the crap out of me. Push down on a piece of wood as it passes over a wood chipper.
Also watch the grain of the wood. It can chatter and jump on difficult grain that is fed in the wrong direction.Like most power tools. Pay attention to cutting forces and where you and the work will end up if something slips. Don't put yourself in a position where the sharp bits/projectile can get you or anyone else.
A jointer with the guard on is reasonably safe. With the wood in the way there is no possible way for the cutter to get you. If you are dumb, there is a small chance you could get sniped as the board clears the cutter but your hands should both be forward of the cutter at that point. For the many that operate without the guard and have exposed blades spinning by your crotch/wrists, the safety is much lower.
What size posts did you use? I'm trying to paint a nice cost picture for a neighbour hoping he'll go for a short fence, six feet high. Sixteen to twenty four feet long.Looking for a spot in our backyard for the above ground 14ft pool to go up this year and there aren't any 'great' spots but I think I found a spot I can securely place, and fence off easier than other spots around the yard. Plus this spot has the most sunlight in the yard which always helps.
View attachment 77996
Red - existing fence
Blue Lines - need to install to protect from kids accessing when we're not around
Orange - decision between digging down and leveling out, or installing a few 4x4s and then placing sand / gravel to level it out. Want to keep it as close to the size of the pool to prevent kids from walking on it and it's only needed to level out the pool
Blue Circle - I'm sure it's obvious
I have a used filter I got for free, and now looking for a 0.75-1HP pump for the pool.
Pool is approx 48" tall so good enough for now. This setup would also allow me to keep the trampoline beside it and not overwhelm the whole yard to make it still usable.
Thoughts on the orange? If I'm going to dig down I'll need to start soon.
Next question....
Best way to place new 6x6 posts for the fence?
Option #1 - dig down 4ft, gravel, post IN concrete
Option #2 - dig down 4ft, gravel, concrete, post ATOP the concrete
Thoughts?
View attachment 77997
Had a decent injury with a table saw where a piece of plywood kicked back and hit me in the gut. That hurt and showed like hell for quite some time. Lesson learned.Those things scare the crap out of me. Push down on a piece of wood as it passes over a wood chipper.