Show What Tool You Made*

/ Show What Tool You Made* #333  
still plenty of tire weights floating around too...
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #334  
I didn't "make" this tool, but I adapted it to suit my needs.

I'm getting lazier as I get older. My knees and back won't let me work on the floor, and the same joints make lifting anything much over 50 pounds up onto the bench where I can work comfortably pretty difficult as well.

I do have a folding engine crane, but digging it out of it's hiding spot, setting it up, hoisting the project up onto the bench, taking the crane back down as it takes up so much space in my small shop, then repeating when I need to take the project back down is just more work than a lazy old far....uh..."fella" like me is willing to do most days.

So, I came up with a relatively inexpensive way to have a traveling electric hoist:

 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #335  
I made a wire brush holder the other day. I've been repairing a truck at work, and had a channel along the back of the cab at the bottom where the floor pan meets back wall. I had done some welding that peeled the paint and no way to get in there with my hands or standard wire brush. So I cut a 4" section of bristles, and screwed it to the holder/handle I made.




Here's how it fits in the spot it was made for... worked perfectly! No busted knuckles or skinned up fingers, made the job take less than 5 minutes.

 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #337  
Dave, how do they reclaim the shot? Is there an easy method for collecting shells? There's a police range around the corner from me with casings lying everywhere
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #338  
Dave, how do they reclaim the shot? Is there an easy method for collecting shells? There's a police range around the corner from me with casings lying everywhere

Brass cases you bend over and pick them up. They are worth picking up. :laughing: Or you can use one of these.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #339  
I made a wire brush holder the other day. I've been repairing a truck at work, and had a channel along the back of the cab at the bottom where the floor pan meets back wall. I had done some welding that peeled the paint and no way to get in there with my hands or standard wire brush. So I cut a 4" section of bristles, and screwed it to the holder/handle I made.




Here's how it fits in the spot it was made for... worked perfectly! No busted knuckles or skinned up fingers, made the job take less than 5 minutes.


Got 'er Done ! :thumbsup:

Change the angle a bit and you've got the World's Toughest BackScratcher !

Rgds, D.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #340  
For picking up brass, the bag a nut is very quick but if the ground is not completely flat it will leave a lot behind.
IMG00295.jpg


The nut wizard (sold by many other names) is slower but can pick up a little more in less than flat ground.
IMG00296.jpg


In true build it yourself fashion, I made this brass vac using a leaf blower/mulcher. The brass falls out onto the 5 gallon buckets and dirt/grass just runs through the blower and back to the ground.
IMG00293.jpg
 

Marketplace Items

Kubota BX25D (A53317)
Kubota BX25D (A53317)
2021 Deere 550K LGP (A60462)
2021 Deere 550K...
2015 Peterbilt 389 T/A Wet Kit Day Cab Truck Tractor (A55973)
2015 Peterbilt 389...
2012 DRAGON 130BBL VAC TRAILER (A58214)
2012 DRAGON 130BBL...
2025 MMS MS36C (A60463)
2025 MMS MS36C...
2015 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon Vehicle (MPV), VIN # 1C4BJWFG8FL728783 (A61165)
2015 Jeep Wrangler...
 
Top