Archive for the 'Shop Tools' Category

Straighten Your Feathers

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

JessEm has created a featherboard that lets you adjust its height (or width) independently of position. What’s more, while positioning the height, guides keep the featherboard parallel to the fence or table.

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This Ain’t A Normal Pair Of Scissors

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Do you know what a good pair of fabric shears costs? It surprised the heck out of me the first time I borrowed my wife’s pair. I might have to pick up a pair of Fiskar’s titanium nitride Shop Shears for my shop so I won’t have to listen to that tirade again.

When you think Fiskars you don’t immediately think shop tool, but they’ve actually sold their Shop Shear for a few years now. They match ergonomic handles to TiN coated stainless steel blades which resist wear, scratches, and chemicals. The resulting shears will cut through fabric, cardboard, rope, wire, plastic strapping, Kevlar, and thin sheet metal, to name a few.

You can pick up the 8″ in pair starting at $11 and the 9-1/2″ pair starting at $16.

Fiskars [Corporate Site]
Street Pricing [Google Products]
Via Amazon [What’s This?]

Workbench Lift

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Different tasks sometimes require different work heights. One solution is to use a lift table like this one from Southworth to turn your workbench into a variable-height workstation. You can use it on top of the bench or build into the top so it’s flush with the surface, depending on your needs.

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SpeedClean BucketVac

Friday, August 7th, 2009

The 1-hp BucketVac vacuum head fits any standard 5-gallon bucket like a lid and turns it into a shop vacuum. This is brilliant — not only does it make use of buckets lying around the shop or jobsite; you can lug it around or store it in the shop in a minimal space.

Once attached to a bucket the BucketVac is a wet/dry vacuum just like any other model except with no wheels. It comes standard with a 2″ diameter hose and looks like a great way to put to work all the extra 5-gallon buckets that need to be filled with stuff you’d rather not touch.

The bad news is the price point appears to hover around $70. Simply put, you could buy two five-gallon Shop Vacs for what it would cost for one of these things, so it may be a little steep for someone that doesn’t really need it.

SpeedClean [Manufacturer's Site]
Street Pricing [Google Products]

Crawford Peg Locks

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

The easy-to-relocate metal hooks that make pegboard so versatile also make pegboard so frustrating. By design, the hooks pop right out of the hole so you can insert them elsewhere. Unfortunately, pulling tools off usually means the hook comes with it, which then falls and bounces out of sight.

Crawford’s Peg Locks are a solution — the picture shows how these small plastic clips attach over the hook and clip to the pegboard. Removal involves using a flat knife or screwdriver to pull out one tab.  About a dime each ($2.62 for a pack of 25 at Amazon), they fit both 1/4″ and 1/8″ pegboard.

Crawford Peg Locks [Corporate Site]
Via Amazon [What’s This?]

Flickr Pool: Drill Press Mystery

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

This interesting-looking old drill press posted to the Toolmonger photo pool has us scratching our collective noggins. It’s obviously a belt-powered drill press of some sort but we have no idea what its original setup would have looked like.

The stock plate doesn’t have a hole in it, which to me says metalwork — though I suppose that’s not always true. The whole thing looks like it’s built for fine adjustment with the knobs at the spindle shaft, but the wheels at the rear are a bit of a question for me. Is the belt supposed to loop through them or is it for a second belt that controls the height?

We always find this type of shop mystery thought-provoking. We hope reader Ghb624 finds out how this rig is meant to be set up and what its original purpose was. Let us know what you think in comments.

Toolmonger Photo Pool [Flickr]

Dealmonger: Magnate 806 Core Box Router Bit

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009


Amazon has the best deal we can find on a 7/8″ cutting diameter Magnate round nose router bit: $18.14, although it’s the same price on the Magnate website.

I happen to need one for an upcoming project so I spent some time looking around on the web. It’s hard to filter out the length vs. the cutting diameter or radius (7/16″), but I think this is the least expensive available. Any comments on the quality of Magnate bits is welcome!

Magnate 806 Core Box Router Bits – 7/16″ Radius; 1/2″ Shank Diameter; 3/4″ Cutting Length [What’s This?][amazon.com]

Big Ass Fans Dish It And Take It

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

The folks at Big Ass Fans must be loving this picture right now. As we understand it, this is what’s left of a shoe factory after it was hit by a tornado that swept through the Sikeston, Missouri area earlier this year. If you look close, the fans are still there.

What does this mean?  Not a whole lot in the grand scheme of things.  In all honesty, no one can predict how tornadoes will behave or what, if anything, will come through undamaged. These fans had just as much chance as anything else that was strapped down in the building.

But on balance, if I were Big Ass Fans I’d have this picture blown up and hung in the corporate lobby.

Note: We’re told that all employees escaped safely.

Big Ass Fans Withstand Extreme Winds [Big Ass Fans]
Big Ass Fans [Website]

The Shop Fox Parrot Vise

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

The Parrot Vise swivels a full 360° like most bench vises, but you can also pull it from its base and replace it on its side to hold things vertically.  Shop Fox designed the vise so you only need to tighten the jaws to stop the vice from swiveling.

The jaws on the Parrot Vise measure 3-1/2″ wide by 2-1/8″ high, and they open to 5″.  Holes in the jaws allow you to mount custom faces, or you can buy the optional rubber-lined tilting jaws.

You can find a Parrot Vise for $40 to $50.

Parrot Vise [Woodstock International]
Street Pricing [Google]
Via Amazon [What’s This?]

Flickr Pool: Stone Cutter

Monday, June 8th, 2009

In this great action shot, reader Vincent Ma cuts some stone for his latest backyard project and shows off his hard-won work clothes.

Using an angle grinder from Canadian Tire, and a Norton diamond blade, I can score grooves in the brick in order to snap the “wings” off the Celtik wall unit. This way I can make beveled units for curved sections of the wall.

My work pants are nearing their end. Here a giant rip opened up and all I can do is duct-tape it to prevent my underwear from showing. Yes, I do know how to sew, but I don’t wanna bother with it.

Never feel bad about working so hard that your work clothes can’t take the strain. The only idiots who’ll make fun of you for that are the same people who’d hire out the project you just did with your bare hands. The duct tape just means you value one type of work over another this weekend — nothing wrong with that.  Also, the stones look great.

Toolmonger Photo Pool [Flickr]

Either Grow A Few More Arms Or Buy A Tri-Vise

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

You want to quickly cut a fence post on the spot, but you don’t have a table or sawhorse close by.  You could try to balance the post on your foot, grip the pipe with one hand, and grip the saw with the other, but that seems a little risky and your cut probably won’t be all that accurate.   The Tri-Vise exists for situations just like this.

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A Sturdy Link In A Very Old Chain

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Reader Simple Simon’s sweet photo of this industrial-looking Canadian Buffalo drill press piqued my interest and inspired me to find out more about it. The key word here is industrial, and as it turns out, though the Canadian Buffalo brand is new to me, the company is old –- very old.

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Grizzly G9959 Metal/Wood Mill

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

I’ve always looked at metal-milling machines like they were only half-functional.  I felt that any machine built to cut or drill metal would work just as well with wood stock rolling through it –- still do, actually.  Metal guys will give you the stink-eye about it, but still, I’m a wood guy.  I see that Grizzly designed this G9959 mill for both metal and wood;  now there’s a forehead-smacker if ever I’ve heard of one.

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Dealmonger: Jet/Powermatic 20% Off At Woodcraft

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Woodcraft is having a sale at all their locations this Friday and Saturday — twenty percent off all Jet and Powermatic tools and accessories.  It’s not a bad deal, especially if you’re looking at getting a big piece of gear like a full-sized wood planer, table saw, or floor-standing drill press.

So if you had your eye on a Powermatic PM2000 3HP table saw, for instance, you’d normally be out about three grand;  this weekend you can shave about $600 off that.  Unless you’re buying equipment used or off the back of a truck, you probably won’t find better deals on this big a selection anytime soon.

I’m going down to check it out, but will wind up leaving my wallet in the car just in case I’m tempted –- which has happened in the past.

Sale Sheet [Woodcraft]

AutoXray TechScan 7000

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

There’s nothing like a bilingual ODB II scanner to get your car or truck moving in the morning. I first saw an AutoXray product when it was featured on Shadetree Mechanic in the ’90s — it was a fairly priced scanner that would work well for any consumer.  Now AutoXray offers upper-end models like the TechScan 7000.

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Finishline AlligatorBoard In Checkerboard

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

A while back Toolmonger reviewed a Finishline AlligatorBoard with a patriotic flag pattern. I can’t see hanging tools off a flag — it just doesn’t seem right to me — but I could work with this black and white checkerboard pattern.

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Reader Question: Is Shopsmith Band Saw Worth It?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Reader Mike is in the market for a Shopsmith band saw, and he asked us how we like it.  It’s a great question, and some folks have already rung in on this one in the positive.

I might be a little biased, but I’d say if your Shopsmith was made in the last 30 years and you want a band saw, it’s a no-brainer.  The saw features a 6″ depth of cut;  the table tilts 5 degrees left and 45 degrees right;  and the blade spins from 700 to 1,050 RPM.

As others have said, you’ll have to tune it and spend a minute or two setting it up, but it’s a small price to pay as far as I’m concerned.  Retail price is in the neighborhood of $500 — but the one I just started running in the shop is on its third decade, and it doesn’t have a single issue.

Shopsmith 11″ Band Saw [Shopsmith]