Memories, was it an aluminium cast thing with cast handle and a blade about 150mm diameter ?Showing my age but purchased a circular saw attachment for it
Memories, was it an aluminium cast thing with cast handle and a blade about 150mm diameter ?Showing my age but purchased a circular saw attachment for it
It sure was , they also did a grinder and polishing attachment, the good old days eh!Memories, was it an aluminium cast thing with cast handle and a blade about 150mm diameter ?
I cannot even say that. If this were true I could get a better end result at a lower price in a store. For me it is the making that matters, not the end result. So I want tools that I enjoy using, but predicting that in advance isn't easy.it's the end result that matters, what you make with what you have got, not the tools.
I used to love making go carts as a youngster with my younger brother , we had a decent hill where we lived and would spend hours and hours riding downhill and having to avoid the lorries going to and from the industrial estate at the top of the hill . So much more fun than the modern day kids that spend hours playing with Xbox and PlayStations and not being active. A good example of how these threads go off topic yet still remain within the woodworking themeNo being wrapped in cotton wool in those days, I would only have been ten when using it to try and make a go kart !!
I'm relatively new to woodworking, and started buying cheap before I knew what to look for. I now mostly buy older, but higher quality tools from eBay or other marketplaces.
Ultimately though low-cost tools made it accessible to me and easy to get started. Some of the copycat brands like Katsu have good to me.
I've often thought that myself, a variation on what to buy when you first leave your parents. Buy cheap stuff since you need a lot of stuff in short order for initial capability. As stuff breaks get better quality replacements- it's less of an outlay in one lump sum. After a while the stuff that hasn't broken is either that which you never use and probably didn't need, or they're doing the job and there wasn't an issue with buying cheap in the first place.The bloke on MythBusters gave some advice and said if you're starting out buying tools buy the cheapest tools that are on the market but when that tool breaks and you need to replace it by the best one that you can afford and after a few years some of the cheap tools will still keep being used and you realise you don't need to spend that much on them then other tools that were expensive you realise that you're using on a daily basis
Edit to add: in answer to your question, ive got a cheap macallister kango. It was 120 quid from screwfix, weighs about 25kg and smashes up concrete. It would have cost me 130 to hire a makita for a week..... so basically it was free because i allowed for hire when pricing the job.
I remember one of those things came up when I was in home insurance, only it was a petrol powered model.I just bought exactly the same tool.
I saw there were 300 positive reviews on the Screwfix site so decided it would do for my 40 M of concrete.
Many people buy this breaker, as you say just to break some fence post concrete, or similar because it is cheaper than hiring the tool, fetching and returning.
After they have finished they then sell them on Ebay (or similar)
Well here we go, actually, i do have a 'cheap tool' experience that would be a good fit in the buying regrets thread!The diesel heaters, concrete breakers, hi-fi are up there with the best, though have appalling customer service - return to china.
Yet offer exceptional value for money.
Sounds like you got a raw deal on that one but hopefully got most of your money back . I guess that’s the risk with 2hand the risk goes up the more you pay . My hilti has paid for itself over and over again but the equivalent model is around the £800-£1000 pound. Last summer I did a fence ( had to remove a dozen or so concrete god fathers that must of been fitted using a pile driver and my poor old hilti was struggling. Turns out the cust had a petrol x army kango ( atlas copo I think ) that I could barely lift but it roared into life and destroyed the old godfathers in no time . We subsequently took it as part payment ( £200 ) and that too has now paid for itself ..Well here we go, actually, i do have a 'cheap tool' experience that would be a good fit in the buying regrets thread!
Last april i bought a petrol dumper, hydraulic tip, tracked, 500kg capacity. I bought it because I had a sum of money in the job for machine hire and decided to buy one rather than hire. 2 or 3 good sized jobs and it's paid for.
It cost £2100, was reduced from the £2500 price tag . The nearest price competitor was lumag at 3k, but it was the same machine, same handles, frame, undercarriage, just different colour. ( chinese )
Now a jcb new was 10k, used 4.5k and up...
Anyway, the cheap handle broke on the first day, it travelled maybe 40 feet before it died. I got an upgraded replacement, but that meant i also needed a different cable. Oh well, teething issues.
Long story of little things to make it better, but after about 35 to 40 hours of work the damn thing sprung an oil leak. I got new oil seals but it turned out to be a part in the driveshaft housing and i was told you had to buy a new assembly ( which was gearbox, driveshafts etc all complete )
Nope. I took it apart to find it was a white metal bearing sleeve ( chinesium ), designed to be worn instead of wearing the shafts out. This could have been avoided if they'd designed it with actual bearing races.
Anyway, I fixed it up and flogged it. A terrible machine that would fail every 40 hours, not to mention all the other things i found along the way.
By that time Black and Decker quality had declined - my B&D hammer drill was bought in 1969 and I was using it yesterday (had a new switch and makes a bearing noise but still going strong), perhaps it should be in the Guinness book of records. It's hard nowadays to define "cheap".My 1st power tool was a b/ decker hammer drill, hammer drills were a fairly new concept to me circa 1978 ish . IT was fine for a few holes for shelving etc . Showing my age but purchased a circular saw attachment for it and cut/ split several lengths of reclaimed maple flooring to make a frame for growing rubber beans on my allotment- again it worked fine but was very slow . A year or so later I was installing a shower and was drilling 20 mm holes through double 3”joists and it got warm , then hot then started to smell and finally burst into flames- I learned from then on that unless I wanted to buy a drill per job then the better the quality the longer it would last . The only time I would consider a cheapo tool is a one off job where I’m unlikely to ever use it again. If The cost of this tool can be added to the job price then it’s all good if it gets said job done even if the tool dies . About 30 years ago I brought a battered old hilti te52 for such a job - breaking up a 3m x 3m concrete garage floor and a 1m x 9m concrete path - the hilti was perfect and custom told me to keep it . Last week I was breaking up 3 inch rendering from the internal walls of the house I’m working in with the same hilti- best £60 I’ve ever spent as it’s only ever had a new power cable . I will mourn its loss when that day comes around.. quality pays even if it’s old quality..
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