ajs
Established Member
In part this is a reflection on the tool regret thread posted yesterday, but also a point I've raised here and there recently.
Forget top quality. What are the tools you buy bargain basement stuff and why?
Feel free to debate an answer but keep it civil. If someone doesn't value your favourite tool it doesn't make them ignorant, equally if they choose to spend where you're cheap they're not an *****.
A couple of my cheap picks:
1. Power sanders of any description. Different kinds of sander do different things, I may use a random orbit, belt sander or oscillating multitool depending on the task, but I've yet to find a real reason why a "good" tool is better than the £20 equivalent from Aldi or similar. Dust collection doesn't cut it: you're going to need to Hoover up anyway. Don't get me started on the pads where clogging is the limiting factor.
2. Multimeters. This came up here a couple of weeks ago. I do have an electronics background and do have precision meters in needed. Never use them. Better use a cheap one that's good enough for everyday stuff and cheaper to replace when it gets killed by an absent minded test on the wrong setting.
3. Hammers. I prefer ball pein hammers as a general rule but provided the head is secure and it's about the right weight for the job I've never seen the point in spending. Those Silverline ones are fine in my book but I'm open to persuasion.
I recognise this could turn into an inflammatory thread so again I urge civility, but believe it's worthy of discussion, after all few have unlimited budgets so it becomes a question of where to spend the cash available instead of how much in total.
Forget top quality. What are the tools you buy bargain basement stuff and why?
Feel free to debate an answer but keep it civil. If someone doesn't value your favourite tool it doesn't make them ignorant, equally if they choose to spend where you're cheap they're not an *****.
A couple of my cheap picks:
1. Power sanders of any description. Different kinds of sander do different things, I may use a random orbit, belt sander or oscillating multitool depending on the task, but I've yet to find a real reason why a "good" tool is better than the £20 equivalent from Aldi or similar. Dust collection doesn't cut it: you're going to need to Hoover up anyway. Don't get me started on the pads where clogging is the limiting factor.
2. Multimeters. This came up here a couple of weeks ago. I do have an electronics background and do have precision meters in needed. Never use them. Better use a cheap one that's good enough for everyday stuff and cheaper to replace when it gets killed by an absent minded test on the wrong setting.
3. Hammers. I prefer ball pein hammers as a general rule but provided the head is secure and it's about the right weight for the job I've never seen the point in spending. Those Silverline ones are fine in my book but I'm open to persuasion.
I recognise this could turn into an inflammatory thread so again I urge civility, but believe it's worthy of discussion, after all few have unlimited budgets so it becomes a question of where to spend the cash available instead of how much in total.