Jameshow
Veteran
Have you seen their range, it's vast. I admit not every manufacturer has everything, but Milwaukee do have virtually everything a tradesman will need
Including garden tools?
Have you seen their range, it's vast. I admit not every manufacturer has everything, but Milwaukee do have virtually everything a tradesman will need
Including garden tools?
Dunno - I have a Makita belt sander and it is a truly wondrous thing for benches, doors and even neatening soil pipe when you've shortened it with a hacksaw.dreadful things, they make a mess of the room you're in, you're lungs and the work piece you are using them on. Machines for folk who do not know what they are doing
Yes, Bosch is covered in references to Germany but most of the garden stuff is actually Chinese, made to a rather low specification. Somehow I have got a decade out of a Rotak 34R mower but a few bits have needed replacing, like the trigger, and it is incredibly flimsy.I've had very good results with Bosch DIY tools and based on this I bought some Bosch garden tools. My experience is Bosch garden equipment is very poor and doesn't match the brand reputation.
I'm no great DIY person but I know this is a dangerous assumption. Some "brands" in B&Q are made only for B&Q and aren't a brand, just a badge. This is fine until something goes wrong. I have a B&Q "brand" garden mower in need of repair. No one is prepared to look at it. Why? The parts will not be available. Now if it was a Stihl, Mountfield, etc. it would be a different story.
Look only at established brands. There's a reason they've stood the test of time.
OP - do you need tradesman quality?
Screwfix own brand (Titan) or Aldi/Lidl offerings are plenty for most DIYers.
Yes, Bosch is covered in references to Germany but most of the garden stuff is actually Chinese, made to a rather low specification. Somehow I have got a decade out of a Rotak 34R mower but a few bits have needed replacing, like the trigger, and it is incredibly flimsy.
well yes, I was more thinking on the lines of finer woodworking - of course belt sanders have there place, if I didn't have access to a proper linisher I would probably use one from time to time. 40 or 60 grit they can remove a fair bit of material quickly - as for cleaning the sandpaer on these machines whilst using, get one of those sticky plastic erasers, they work really well.The idea of sanding, say, a house full of floorboards by hand is just nuts
well yes, I was more thinking on the lines of finer woodworking - of course belt sanders have there place, if I didn't have access to a proper linisher I would probably use one from time to time. 40 or 60 grit they can remove a fair bit of material quickly - as for cleaning the sandpaer on these machines whilst using, get one of those sticky plastic erasers, they work really well.
But getting pack to sandpaper in general, let alone the 'orbital" thing that folk seem to obsess about,
My mate here who makes violins, don't think I have ever seen him with a bit of sandpaper, let alone a mad powered sanding device. this was him the day hollowing out the back bit, he has a map of the required thicknesses, each part of it has to be o a certain thickness to get the correct sound. incredibly time consuming, I'm always impressed with his skill
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or the table I have just finished, the top was just a card scraper, hand sanded the feet, and a bit of 320 > 400 on the pedestal - Orbital sanders would just make a mess
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few folk ever get to hear about card scrapers, marketing mans nightmare, you can make them for free out of an old hand saw, sharpen them with an old screwdriver. Orbital sanders are the thing, after they have sold it they can then sell you shaped sticky back sandpaper in many different grits, then some PPE, dust mask goggles and ear protectors, I'm sure you will soon be able to bluetooth it to you're mobile phone, yep that,s where the marketing is at and most people have one if not several, they're good at their jobs. the marketing men that is, not whatever it is they are selling
I agree with this point of view, doing gardening tasks by hand is therapeutic.As I was using electric hedge cutters on my mum's hedge, I offered him their use. He politely declined, saying he preferred shears as it was 'very theraputic'.
I'm sadly not of retirement age, work full time, have a big garden, so got all the power tools I could afford!Thirty years on, I clean our brickweave drive by sitting on my backside using a very old kitchen knife and yard brush.![]()
Regarding hand screwdrivers at the risk of teaching my grandmother to suck eggs, not everyone really gets the difference between phillips and posidrive. They are similar looking and the same size for a given "number" but they are not the same, even though they "seem" to fit superficially. To confuse matters further there are also JIS screws and drivers which can feature on Jap motorcycles and maybe some cycle parts.
Now that out of the way, I very much like Facom's older style red handled drivers. Not tried their new shape handles, but likely still a good bet. I also like their "Isoryl" range with clear plastic handles, more of an engineer's or instrument screwdriver style.
I do rate Facom generally as they are not silly money like Snap on or whatever and seem to be good quality. Whilst I'm only an amateur, I've not been disapointed with any Facom tool - mostly spanners, screwdrivers in my case