natto fire
Diamond Member
- Jan 4, 2000
- 7,117
- 10
- 76
Common sense helps;It is not abundant on this forum.
Can you drive a 16-penny nail home with 3 whacks?
That depends, can I use my trusty 20 oz. Estwing?
Common sense helps;It is not abundant on this forum.
Can you drive a 16-penny nail home with 3 whacks?
indeed you can.That depends, can I use my trusty 20 oz. Estwing?
when I've got time to kill and I'm out of internet articles to read
it makes me wonder, how to people actually learn to become handy so they can put the work into a fixer-upper rather than having to contract it all out?
You answered your question before you even asked it ... You don't spend all your free time sitting in front of a computer sucking up worthless knowledge online. You get up, get out of the house and you do something real.
Help a friend build a deck, paint a house, replace a roof, install a water heater, repair a car. Now do that for 10 or 15 years and you'll be very handy. Spend 10 years in front of a computer and you'll be just about as useless 10 years from now as you are today.
A trick with the Estwing hammers is when you buy it there's a little sticky wing on it, you leave that there, it makes it faster. It's not just decoration for when it's in the retail store.
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You answered your question before you even asked it ... You don't spend all your free time sitting in front of a computer sucking up worthless knowledge online. You get up, get out of the house and you do something real.
Help a friend build a deck, paint a house, replace a roof, install a water heater, repair a car. Now do that for 10 or 15 years and you'll be very handy. Spend 10 years in front of a computer and you'll be just about as useless 10 years from now as you are today.
You definetly aren't, Red seems to know what he's talking about.No sir;not at all.
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That isn't even the trademark blue and maize rubber grip. I get it if you are a Stanley sympathizer, I have a Bostitch hammer myself, but disparaging speed jokes of Estwing will not be tolerated.
Really my favorite hammer was lost in New Mexico unfortunately, it was a Craftsman 32 oz. ball peen.
That is a different handle than the typical blue, I think it's leather, pretty sure I saw that one on How It's Made actually.Just found on Google. Mine has a genuine blue handle. It's a 24oz though. I framed my whole basement with it and 3" 1/2 nails. The head kinda took lot of abuse though, when I first started my aim sucked. Got better with time.
Frame nail + rebar wire also makes a great concrete fastener. Faster and stronger than tapcons. Drill hole, insert pieces of rebar wire, make sure nail does not fall in hole, then hammer it in. Hopefully you never want to take it out.
I used to do wood work, pottery, weaving, and sandal making. I used to paint, pictures and houses, and dig for fossils. I wanted to make things. Do something you like for its sake and you will become handy at it. I want to learn to work stone and make a wok stove that burns charcoal. I'd also like to learn to knit.
Recruit or meet a knowledgeable friend for anything you can't afford to screw up and spend twice the money on.
I have seriously been thinking about approaching a local Chinese restaurant that I really like and making them a proposal: I'll come and work for free a few hours per week, chopping vegetables (prep), cleaning toilets, scrubbing walls, or whatever, and in exchange, they teach me how to cook all my fav dishes there. Say, one dish per week should cover the six or seven fav dishes I have, plus I could just apply what I learn to near-enough variations on my own. And from there, with the help of some cook books or YouTube videos, the sky is the limit.
I see no reason you could not find a general contractor for home repairs/improvements in your area, and just offer to come work for free for a couple-few hours every week, if they will have you.