yesterday I thought I was a greedy b*****d but now that I have seen the overwhelming support for not lending tools I already feel much better.
I suppose the issue is that someone who has not done handy work before does not appreciate that you have a drill which can cost 800 pounds and one which you can buy from aldi for 5 pounds. the drill is just the drill and it cuts holes. I have a friend who was one of these people who used to ridicule my lust of tools. his point was that a saw was just a saw. I realised that either brain injury or a miracle he could see would change his mind. So I arranged for the latter. I asked him to cut along the length of a laminate floor using my black and decker jigsaw (which is by no means the worst on the market). by the end, he had sweat dripping from his nose, the workbench had managed to dance its way half way across the room and when I asked him to inspect the cut, the had cut a radio wave. I then fitted a bosch blade on my brand new dewalt jigsaw and asked him to make the same cut. By the time the cut was made he had a grin from his left ear to his right ear, and in his own words it was like cutting philadelphia cheese with a knife. Suffice to say that the said friend no longer makes fun of me when I spend 4 days stalking a hilti drill on eBay.
so going back, I guess people who have not done much DIY will tend to think of tools as consumables which are made to be used, abused.... and you have to kiss the tool goodbye when you lend it to them. One of my professors a few years back would say "he who lends a good book is a donkey and he who returns a good book is a bigger donkey".
I suppose the issue is that someone who has not done handy work before does not appreciate that you have a drill which can cost 800 pounds and one which you can buy from aldi for 5 pounds. the drill is just the drill and it cuts holes. I have a friend who was one of these people who used to ridicule my lust of tools. his point was that a saw was just a saw. I realised that either brain injury or a miracle he could see would change his mind. So I arranged for the latter. I asked him to cut along the length of a laminate floor using my black and decker jigsaw (which is by no means the worst on the market). by the end, he had sweat dripping from his nose, the workbench had managed to dance its way half way across the room and when I asked him to inspect the cut, the had cut a radio wave. I then fitted a bosch blade on my brand new dewalt jigsaw and asked him to make the same cut. By the time the cut was made he had a grin from his left ear to his right ear, and in his own words it was like cutting philadelphia cheese with a knife. Suffice to say that the said friend no longer makes fun of me when I spend 4 days stalking a hilti drill on eBay.
so going back, I guess people who have not done much DIY will tend to think of tools as consumables which are made to be used, abused.... and you have to kiss the tool goodbye when you lend it to them. One of my professors a few years back would say "he who lends a good book is a donkey and he who returns a good book is a bigger donkey".