Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck

/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,301  
Hate to interrupt the discussion of oriental food and eating habits but did everyone notice in the new catalog the 16 drawer, 26", red roller cabinet 961609/67831 is back on sale for $299.99 on page 2 (or you can get it for $349.99 on page 18).
They've also got the small Lithium Iron jump battery on sale for $69.99 on page 2 and their is a coupon for $10 off on page 34 (don't know if it will work)
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,302  
Back to chopstics for a moment if OK. I've wanted to use them for years but have no idea how. Can anyone offer a quick primer? The closest I've been to chopsticks is HF.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,303  
Nothing sillier than eating supper on the dinner table. What's up with that?
Also, TV trays were intended to be used with the old tube type TVs not flatscreens.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,304  
Hate to interrupt the discussion of oriental food and eating habits but did everyone notice in the new catalog the 16 drawer, 26", red roller cabinet 961609/67831 is back on sale for $299.99 on page 2 (or you can get it for $349.99 on page 18).
They've also got the small Lithium Iron jump battery on sale for $69.99 on page 2 and their is a coupon for $10 off on page 34 (don't know if it will work)
It will come pre-dented but we have two in our family and it is a deal. I suggest you open it on the premises if you are picky. The casters are beefy I will say.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,305  
Reminded me of this instant classic ...

View attachment 507566


You should see my wife not only eat rice with them, but noodles, ice cream and peanuts too. Then the chopsticks get used as "knife and fork" for cutting meat. My son got something stuck in his throat and the chop sticks became long reach tweezers.

Restaurants won't let you keep the silverware, but they hand out all the chopsticks you want. Then they get used as letter openers and general cooking utensils for stir fry, etc. Sheesh.
 

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/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,306  
Nothing sillier than eating supper on the dinner table. What's up with that?
Also, TV trays were intended to be used with the old tube type TVs not flatscreens.
And forks and spoons were designed to be used before TV's were invented.
TV trays were designed to be folded up and put away, but I've several that have been set up for years in rooms with flatscreen TV's and others in rooms without TV's.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,307  
Chopsticks make great coffee stirrers!

I went in Tractor Supply yesterday. I was immediately struck that it smelled EXACTLY like Harbor Freight!
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,308  
Crash, save your money on the battery powered oscillating saw. The corded one is a great deal at less than $20 but I don't trust HF old style batteries to last more than a season and replacements can be hard to find.

Also, those tree limb cutter things are widow makers and not very effective. You have to stand right under the branch to cut and the branch will naturally swing down on top of you as it cuts through. A little safer with two people standing to opposite sides but still not a terribly effective tool. There is a good reason you never see tree surgeons use them.
Thanks for the tip on the battery powered saw.
Don't plan on using lopper thing alone, will have a friend help. Some branches scratch on side of barn, sounds kind of like fingernails on a black board.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,309  
Chopsticks make great coffee stirrers!

I went in Tractor Supply yesterday. I was immediately struck that it smelled EXACTLY like Harbor Freight!

My sniffer must be out of calibration. What do these places "smell like"?
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,310  
My sniffer must be out of calibration. What do these places "smell like"?

I smell dog and horse feed at TSC.. My HF smells pretty much like nothing. Now Kohls/JC Penny stink!
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,313  
Also, those tree limb cutter things are widow makers and not very effective. You have to stand right under the branch to cut and the branch will naturally swing down on top of you as it cuts through. A little safer with two people standing to opposite sides but still not a terribly effective tool. There is a good reason you never see tree surgeons use them.

IF what Crash was describing was one of those cutting chains on a rope, I agree: they are not something I'm interested in messing with. A pole saw is a much better way to go. You don't have to go with the "mini chainsaw on a stick" type if money (or weight) is an issue. Unfortunately, the Harbor Freight Pole Saw is a waste of time - not much worth getting one that only extends to 8 feet. I have a a Fiskars that probably extends to 14' and has a 15" saw blade plus a lopper. I don't use it much, but it is handy when I need it, and it works well.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,314  
Same as a tire store. New synthetic rubber and plastics still exuding solvent fumes. With a slight twinge of lacquer-solvent fumes too.

Sometimes with an added whiff of fish oil - or something like that. I've never been able to figure that one out.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,315  
My sniffer must be out of calibration. What do these places "smell like"?

Oh, this is an easy one. They smell like the inside of an inexpensive car tire. It's the blended scent of evaporating rubber and solvents. I figure that's why the car mats shrink over time. It's a very identifiable smell and a clever entrepreneur could do a musk out of it for guys in countries where it's cool. Kind of an "Old Spice" thing.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,318  
IF what Crash was describing was one of those cutting chains on a rope, I agree: they are not something I'm interested in messing with. A pole saw is a much better way to go. You don't have to go with the "mini chainsaw on a stick" type if money (or weight) is an issue. Unfortunately, the Harbor Freight Pole Saw is a waste of time - not much worth getting one that only extends to 8 feet. I have a a Fiskars that probably extends to 14' and has a 15" saw blade plus a lopper. I don't use it much, but it is handy when I need it, and it works well.

I assumed he was talking about one of the chain and rope thingies. I have one and it is both mostly useless and certainly dangerous at least for solo use.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,319  
After watching a professional tree crew I concluded what works best is the long curved saw on a long lightweight pole. I have a couple of those, plus the type with a lopper included. The lopper/saw combo feels too heavy after a half hour, working all day with it would tie me in knots. Plus the combo unit more frequently gets snarled up in dense branches.

Of course the lopper is needed for small branches but again, just having one tool (lopper) up there instead of the saw/lopper combo reduces wasting time all snarled up when you could be cutting. Working overhead is tiring, for me it is worth it to have separate saw and lopper - headed poles.
 
/ Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #7,320  
After watching a professional tree crew I concluded what works best is the long curved saw on a long lightweight pole. I have a couple of those, plus the type with a lopper included. The lopper/saw combo feels too heavy after a half hour, working all day with it would tie me in knots. Plus the combo unit more frequently gets snarled up in dense branches.

Of course the lopper is needed for small branches but again, just having one tool (lopper) up there instead of the saw/lopper combo reduces wasting time all snarled up when you could be cutting. Working overhead is tiring, for me it is worth it to have separate saw and lopper - headed poles.

The thing I have not mastered with those curved pole saws is how to make the undercut before trying to cut through the branch. If you don't then you invariably get a tear in the bark on the underside of the stump and that isn't healthy for the tree. I try to do it by cutting with the reversed saw from both sides of the branch but sometimes it is hard to get at both sides. Nice thing about a pole chain saw is that you can make those cuts in a second or two just before cutting the branch.
 

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