Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck

   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,091  
Ridgid, never had a problem with there corded tools and I own a few. Unfortunately there cordless tools are a different story. Bought a cordless jobmax from HD liked all the right angle attachments for it, such as a chuck, impact, and ratchet.
Kept killing the batteries. Took them to HD, wouldn't fix or replace them, HD would send me to a Ridgid authorized repair shop 20 miles away. I correctly sent in there lifetime replacement warranty which was a pain. After several trips to the repair shop, I wrote a scathing review on the HD website. Ridgid contacted me directly and sent me upgraded batteries and a new charger. Few problems since, however I no longer use my Ridgid jobmax in a professional environment anymore.
 
   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,092  
Does anyone who depends on tools everyday all day long shop at Harbor Freight?

jmf
I do, I've go both Pittsburg and icon impact sockets. Love the icons the Pittsburg are ust ok. I've only broken one Pittsburg and they replaced it no problem. The only downfall is they don't sell individual sockets if you loose one but you can buy a whole set for what one snap on socket costs off the truck.
 
   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,093  
Does anyone who depends on tools everyday all day long shop at Harbor Freight?
I see that was posted in 2008.

In the intervening 14 years HF has new management and has set new objectives. It looks like they intend to replace Craftsman as 'America's Tool Store' in their better new lines. And compete with the tool trucks on some items where they sell near-identical at 1/5 the price.

It's random, they still sell a lot of junk alongside the new lines. Go to the tool truck if you need your stuff financed and you don't have the patience to try something new.

Their $12 pruner I described above (August 26) is indistinguishable from the $90 version it was cloned from.
 
   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,094  
Dang. Another very useful HF item is on Closeout. $3.

Funnel tray. Ideal for pouring a plastic jar of miscellany into, to pick out the specific bolt, washer, etc that you need.

This is the simplest way ever, to then pour small parts back into a peanut butter jar. I recommend buy at least two.

image_17574.jpg
 
   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,095  
They're like those magnetic parts dishes, when you need it you remember it's already full from the last project started, that's why the minimum number is three.
 
   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,096  
I keep a lot of gaskets and seals in coffee cans and I’m constantly pouring them out into the lid for sorting..
When I’m done, I just squeeze the lid together and pour the rest into the can..
BUT.. I like that tray.!!
 
   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,097  
When I was praising my Harbor Freight tools, I forgot a really important one: the hydraulic lift cart. They come in 500-pound and 1000-pound models.

These things are fantastic. I got the little one because there is no way I could put the big one in a vehicle by myself. I use it a lot.

I had a terrible 4' by 8' shelf unit in my workshop. The guy who built the house made it. Each corner post was a 4x4, and the shelves were 1/2" plywood, so it weighed a lot. I decided to rotate it so the short side was against the wall. This made it more useful.

I was able to get the tractor into the shop to do the hard part, but getting it where I really wanted it was not something the tractor could do well. I removed the handle from the cart so I could get it under the shelf unit, and then I jacked the whole unit up and put it exactly where I wanted it. Amazing.

It's also good for moving heavy stuff into and out of cars.

Today I used it to get my tractor into my shop so I could work on it. The rain these days is crazy, so I couldn't put it back together outside. I put a strap on the tractor in the rear, and I connected it to my John Deere garden tractor. I couldn't budge the big tractor. I realized the bucket was anchoring it. And I couldn't use the hydraulics.

I used a floor jack to pick the bucket up a little, and that allowed me to get the bucket off. Then I lifted the quick change attachment high enough to put it on the Harbor Freight cart. I used the cart to jack the attachment up so it wouldn't drag. Then I used the small tractor to pull the big one into the shop. The cart came right along with it.

Wonderful tool. And you can modify them. You can fabricate things like ramps so you can get mowers and generators onto them.

09 22 19 workshop shelf move project 05 small.jpg
 
   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,098  
When I was praising my Harbor Freight tools, I forgot a really important one: the hydraulic lift cart. They come in 500-pound and 1000-pound models.

These things are fantastic. I got the little one because there is no way I could put the big one in a vehicle by myself. I use it a lot.

I had a terrible 4' by 8' shelf unit in my workshop. The guy who built the house made it. Each corner post was a 4x4, and the shelves were 1/2" plywood, so it weighed a lot. I decided to rotate it so the short side was against the wall. This made it more useful.

I was able to get the tractor into the shop to do the hard part, but getting it where I really wanted it was not something the tractor could do well. I removed the handle from the cart so I could get it under the shelf unit, and then I jacked the whole unit up and put it exactly where I wanted it. Amazing.

It's also good for moving heavy stuff into and out of cars.

Today I used it to get my tractor into my shop so I could work on it. The rain these days is crazy, so I couldn't put it back together outside. I put a strap on the tractor in the rear, and I connected it to my John Deere garden tractor. I couldn't budge the big tractor. I realized the bucket was anchoring it. And I couldn't use the hydraulics.

I used a floor jack to pick the bucket up a little, and that allowed me to get the bucket off. Then I lifted the quick change attachment high enough to put it on the Harbor Freight cart. I used the cart to jack the attachment up so it wouldn't drag. Then I used the small tractor to pull the big one into the shop. The cart came right along with it.

Wonderful tool. And you can modify them. You can fabricate things like ramps so you can get mowers and generators onto them.

View attachment 761872
Reminds me of my hf MC table lift had it for over 10 yrs used it a lot when I rebuilt and tinkered with older snowmobiles. Welded square tubing on it with removable smaller diameter tubing and angle to put the skis on. Much nicer than being on your knees or crouching working on something.
 

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   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,099  
Forgot about this amazing hf 7x12 bandsaw contraption, returned to hf by whoever initially bought it as non working never wanted one but price was worth my time to try and get it working again a
Few shims, adjustments, and four letter words later it stopped throwing the blade. Great to set the downfeed and do other things while it cuts. Definitely beats a chopsaw, or wafer wheel on thicker/ bigger stuff. Added some scrap sheetmetal to the sides to help catch the cutting fluid which before doing that would go all over the floor.
 

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   / Harbor Freight Tools that don't suck #15,100  
Forgot about this amazing hf bandsaw contraption, returned to hf by whoever initially bought it as non working never wanted one but price was worth my time to try and get it working again until a few shims, adjustments, and four letter words later it stopped throwing the blade. Great to set the downfeed and do other things while it cuts. Definitely beats a chopsaw, or wafer wheel on thicker stuff. Added some scrap sheetmetal to the sides to help catch the cutting fluid.
Those are good saws to have.. We used a large Jet one in a production environment. Worked great for years..
 

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