Monday, December 26, 2011

DEWALT Heavy-Duty 3100 PSI 6.5 HP Gas-Powered Pressure Washer DP3100

!±8±DEWALT Heavy-Duty 3100 PSI 6.5 HP Gas-Powered Pressure Washer DP3100

Brand : DEWALT
Rate :
Price : $699.00
Post Date : Dec 26, 2011 11:31:36
Usually ships in 1-2 business days



The DeWalt heavy-duty 3,100 PSI gas-powered pressure washer features a Honda 6.5 HP OHV GX engine for commercial-quality reliability. The pump operates at a 2.8 GPM maximum for top cleaning efficiency. A thermal protection and low oil shutoff prevents engine and pump damage. 10-inch wheels allow the pump to easily roll over a variety of different terrain, and five spray nozzles are included for added versatility. The included 25-foot steel braided hose is extremely durable and covers most job sites without having to move the pressure washer. The pressure washer comes backed with a 1-year warranty.

What's in the Box
Pressure washer, five spray nozzles, spray gun, 16-inch stainless steel lance, and 25-foot-by-3/8-inch steel braided hose

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Monday, December 19, 2011

DEWALT DPW3835 3,800 PSI Honda GX270 Gas Powered Heavy Duty Pressure Washer (CARB Compliant)

!±8±DEWALT DPW3835 3,800 PSI Honda GX270 Gas Powered Heavy Duty Pressure Washer (CARB Compliant)

Brand : DEWALT
Rate :
Price : $999.00
Post Date : Dec 19, 2011 03:57:05
Usually ships in 1-2 business days



Dewalt DPW3835 3800 psi gas pressure washer features Honda GX270 commercial series ohv engine with oil alert and TC commercial series pump. Triplex pump design with ceramic pistons, adjustable unloader and thermal relief valve, 12 gauge steel frame, 1 1/4-Inch tubular steel handles, welded construction with solid steel 5/8-Inch axle. Designed with 5 quick connect nozzles: 0,15,25,40,soap 3/8-Inch, 50-Foot, 4500 psi with quick connect fittings and 13-Inch premium pneumatic tires (double sealed).

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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Woodworking Hand Tools Needed by a Professional Furniture Maker - Part3

!±8± Woodworking Hand Tools Needed by a Professional Furniture Maker - Part3

In this article the last of the series of three, I am talking about the last section of tools that a young apprentice cabinetmaker would need to start off their collection of handtools. In previous weeks I've talked about planes and chisels, marking and measuring tools and all that remains now are two areas of hand tools that have changed most for the modern European cabinet maker - those of saws and routers.

There was a time when a cabinet makers toolkit would have half a dozen hand saws. He'd have two or three back saws, dovetail saw, a tenon saw, maybe a coping saw. He would also have several long saws, a rip saw, a cross cut saw, probably a couple of panel saws sharpened in different ways. Each of these saws had a different purpose and would be used for a different part of the job. Tool catalogues were full to busting of saw companies products boasting features like breasted tooth lines and taper grinding .

All this now is no more. In the modern cabinet makers workshop the bench saw has largely been replaced either by the small machine - like the table saw or the band saw, or by the portable hand tool such as the jig saw or contractors circular saw. I don't propose to look at power tools or machines in this article but will still concentrate on what is left, for what is left is actually quite important. It will be a sad day when a cabinet maker can't actually pick up a saw and cut a piece of wood dead straight, trim the end of a tenon or cut a mitre just shy of the line.

But sometimes it feels like that day isn't too far away for so much of the sawing dimensioning of components is done nowadays on the small machine. It's so much easier to potter off away from the bench, in our case go downstairs to a machine room and buzz that little bit of wood off on the table saw. Cutting it off by hand involves effort, energy and skill. It also involves a good saw. Now it saddens me that when I look in the tool catalogue these days, the saw section which used to occupy a whole chapter is now condensed down to two or three pages but it's still possible to buy an excellent saw , the trouble is it comes from Japan.

Here at our Shebbear workshops I must admit that we have allowed the "tools of the devil" to take over. I've had Japanese chisels and waterstones in my workshop for 20 or more years but Japanese saws came when Nick Chandler and I got together 4 years ago. I had never really taken to Japanese saws but many of my students have used them with great success. Basically because when I started work I was lucky enough to find myself a really good dovetail saw. This was a saw made by Roberts & Lee and fitted with an open handle. For nearly twenty years I was advising students to buy similar Roberts & Lee, Dorchester, dovetail saws. Now lots of my students bought their 8 inch and 10 inch saws with beautiful walnut handles and lovely brass backs.

They paid something approaching £50 for each saw Just recently I decided to treat myself to a new 10 inch dovetail saw. A natural choice wasn't a Japanese rubbishy thing but the £49 Roberts & Lee, Dorchester, 590 walnut handled whizzo dovetail saw. I thought it was British and I've had a saw like that for over 25 years. Fair to say I unhappy with my new saw I experienced myself the disappointment I had visited upon so many of my students. The thickness of the saw plate was roughly similar to my old dovetail saw. The quality and weight of the brass back was if anything a little heavier, which is probably appropriate for a slightly longer saw. The way that the handle was fitted to the back and blade assembly was loose and sloppy. Even with the blade tightened as much as I could there was a gap of a quarter of a millimetre on either side where my old saw was tight and snug. Why in this age when such wonderful feats of engineering can be accomplished as a manner of course by robots can we not make a back saw with a decently fitting wooden handle. When it came to using the saw I was prepared for a tussle.

Dovetail saws come with a crosscut sharpening and wide set that means they don't really function very well especially ripping dry hardwood. What with all the saws I've helped students set up over the years I learnt how to get these little saws running reasonably well. It involves firstly taking a cloth soaked in thinners to the blade and removing most of the gunk that manufacturers leave on the blade to protect it from rust whilst it is in the shop. Once you've done this it's necessary to slightly stone off some of the set applied to the saw. A dovetail saw is a precision instrument the way these saws are set in the factory is to my mind much too coarse.

A good dovetail saw should cut a nice fine kerf and you can only achieve this by stoning off some of the set by running a fine stone down either side of the blade or as I used to do tapping the set back with a small hammer on an anvil. This can get the saw running reasonably well but what it really needs is a full re-sharpen and that's best accomplished by taking a small saw file and filing a 90 degree to the saw blade just one stroke per tooth. I think that dovetail saws when sharpened new are sharpened in cross cut fashion when really most of the action, certainly in our workshop, a rip point seems to work much more efficiently.

Now you can be patriotic and you can go on supporting these old saw makers but there comes a day when somebody puts a saw in your hands that works so much better, costs less than half as much, you have to think why am I beating my head against this brick wall.. Perhaps I should not continue to advise you go on paying nearly £50 for British saw when there's the Japanese equivalent for £17.79 that does the job rather better straight out of the box. But then I remember what they did to our motorcycle industry.

Now the difficulty with these Japanese saws is they require a different technique. They cut on the pull stroke whereas European saws cut on the push. But don't they work beautifully. Two saws that seem to have found a home in our workshop are the Doutsuki-Me which seems to be the equivalent of the European dovetail saw and the professional Ryoba saw. The Doutsuki-Me saw is a very fine light back saw with a long handle which makes the control relatively straight forward. But the problem everyone had a few years ago with these saws was sharpening the wretched things. That has been overcome recently with the introduction of the replaceable blade. Nowadays the Doutsuki-Me saw is sold complete for just under £18 and a spare standard blade for just over £10. I think Nick tends to replace his saw blade maybe two or three times a year which makes this quite an expensive saw, but for the cabinetmaker this is a very important tool and one would spend whatever is necessary within reason to achieve these results .

The Ryoba saw also has a replaceable blade, but don't confuse replaceable in this context with the cheap throw away blades found European saws. This is a saw made for the professional market. The saw has two cutting edges. The top edge has rip teeth with a finer set of teeth adjacent to the handle for starting the cut while the other edge has cross cut teeth which gives a very smooth clean cut. The centre of the blade is scraped out in the same way that old fashioned panel saws had tapered round blades this is done to help prevent the saws sticking in a deep cut. I must admit that these "tools of the devil" have taken a long time to arrive in my very conservative and chauvinistic workshop. Even given my support for the British motorcycle industry I can't go on supporting Messrs Roberts & Lee when the design and construction of their best saws seems to have deteriorated over time rather than improved.

Now we come to routers. The second area I want to look at is the single tool that has changed cabinet making in the last 25 years - that of the router. I must admit that I hate routers. Not for what it's done to cabinet making but for the bloody noise and mess they make. They are filthy tools that create a fine dust that covers the whole workshop in brown snow and admit a scream that would drive a Methodist to drink. As far as I'm concerned the only good router's a dead router. However they are incredibly useful. A router is essentially a small portable machine centre, infinitely versatile, used in a myriad of ways depending on your tooling and ingenuity. We have five routers in the shop at the moment and probably two are in if not constant then in intermittent use most of the time

The most useful is a small router and I think the small router would be the only I would recommend a beginner to buy first. The large router is a bit of a brute but eventually you will need a large router as well as a small one. Of the small routers today available on the market the choice in the professional workshop seems to be between the Dewalt DW6201K and the Trend T5. Both these routers have variable speed and a proven track record. I think the Dewalt weighs in at £212 while the Trend costs £159 including a metal box. I think if I were buying a new router today I would probably go for the Trend T5 but then this is because it's so similar to my old Elu router that I would feel at home and comfortable with it.

A new router in the larger category which found a place in our affections most recently is the Freud FT2000VCE. This is a half inch router with loads of grunt but it comes equipped with a very accurate and nice to use fine depth adjuster which makes it very useful for fitting underneath a router table. This is one of the major uses in this workshop of this kind of big router. This place isn't really the place to discuss the merit of each particular model of router. One point I would like to stress is the way a small hand held router usually with a quarter inch collet has really become a key hand tool in the cabinet makers tool box. Rather than filling his tool box with half sets of molding planes, the young cabinet maker will be gathering together assorted set of router bits of different sizes and shapes and qualities.

Our toolkit series is complete but this is just the start of the process of assembling your set of tools . It seems to me that the professional is always seeking to have the best tools available not the most tools. We always seem to seek to replace that irritating plane with a better one or with something that will do the job better. Like a better dovetail saw.


Woodworking Hand Tools Needed by a Professional Furniture Maker - Part3

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Thursday, December 8, 2011

Imported Tools vs "Brand Name" - Are They As Good?

!±8± Imported Tools vs "Brand Name" - Are They As Good?

So you are looking for hand or power tools on the Internet or in a "brick & Mortar" tool store, and you keep running into tools imported from China, Taiwan, Korea, Germany and various other countries. A lot of these tools seem to be priced well under the comparable "name brand" tools you are used to... are they as good or better, or are they just cheap knockoffs.

A larger percentage of these tool deserve a better look, they are in many cases as good as, or better, and usually a very good bargain when compared side by side with their "brand name" counterparts.

In the last few years the quality of tools produced in many of the Asian countries has increased significantly...they are no longer the "knuckle busters" of the past. This is really the same path that the Japanese tool producers followed in the sixty's and seventies, we all recall the rather poor quality of Japanese products coming to the US...cars, tools, electronics were all of dubious value. As these producers learned more about our market, our expectations and started making money...the quality of what they produced and offered for sale became very good. Today many of the products from Japan rival the quality of anything produced anywhere in the world.

Look for a reputable retailer either "brick & Mortar", or online. Make sure they stand behind what they sell. You may find that the tool you are buying is a great value. You will be surprised by the variety of tools offered.

Jim Newell


Imported Tools vs "Brand Name" - Are They As Good?

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Friday, December 2, 2011

DEWALT DH4240B 4,200 PSI Honda GX390 Belt Drive Gas Powered Heavy Duty Pressure Washer (CARB Compliant)

!±8± DEWALT DH4240B 4,200 PSI Honda GX390 Belt Drive Gas Powered Heavy Duty Pressure Washer (CARB Compliant)


Rate : | Price : $1,299.00 | Post Date : Dec 02, 2011 20:56:22
Usually ships in 24 hours

Dewalt DH4240B 4200 psi belt drive gas pressure washer features Honda GX390 commercial series ohv engine with oil alert TX commercial series pump. Triplex pump design with ceramic pistons, adjustable unloader and thermal relief valve, 10 gauge steel frame with 10 gauge sub-frame, 1 1/4-Inch tubular steel handles, solid steel 5/8-Inch welded axle. Designed with 5 quick connect nozzles: 0,15,25,40,soap 3/8-Inch, 50-Foot, 4500 psi with quick connect fittings and 13-Inch premium pneumatic tires (double sealed).

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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

RIDGID burden washer

Overview of RIDGID 3300 pressure washer - It delivers a powerful 3300 PSI, and is equipped with electronic fuel injection for easier starting, cleaner running, and better fuel economy. Add the reliability of a commercial-grade Subaru engine and a protective roll cage frame design, and you have a superior professional-grade pressure washer that cleans up the competition.

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Power Boss 020309 3,000 psi 2.5 Gallon-Per-Minute Honda GC190 Gas-Powered Pressure Washer

!±8± Power Boss 020309 3,000 psi 2.5 Gallon-Per-Minute Honda GC190 Gas-Powered Pressure Washer

Brand : Power Boss | Rate : | Price : $479.97
Post Date : Nov 27, 2011 04:19:35 | Usually ships in 24 hours


Powered by a Honda OHC engine, this pressure washer is great for cleaning siding, driveways, and second stories. The maintenance-free axial cam pump with Easy Startâ"¢ technology produces 3000 psi @ 2.5 gpm providing enough cleaning power for any project.

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Craftsman 19.2 volt C3 Impact Driver Model 17080 Driving Lags Screws

www.toolboxhero.com Produced by Paul from ToolBoxHero. Just a quick video showing the C3 Impact driving 6 inch 3 inch lag screws. As you can see the 19.2 volt tool drives them easily and will even set the washer into the 2 X 6. You can read the full review of this impact driver at toolboxhero.com

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

DEWALT DPW4240 4,200 PSI Honda GX390 Gas Powered Heavy Duty Pressure Washer (CARB Compliant)

!±8±DEWALT DPW4240 4,200 PSI Honda GX390 Gas Powered Heavy Duty Pressure Washer (CARB Compliant)

Brand : DEWALT
Rate :
Price : $1,018.25
Post Date : Nov 22, 2011 02:29:33
Usually ships in 24 hours



Dewalt DPW4240 4200 psi gas pressure washer features Honda GX390 commercial series ohv engine with oil alert and TX commercial series pump. Triplex pump design with ceramic pistons, adjustable unloader and thermal relief valve, 12 gauge steel frame, 1 1/4-Inch tubular steel handles, welded construction with solid steel 5/8-Inch axle. Designed with 5 quick connect nozzles: 0,15,25,40,soap 3/8-Inch, 50-Foot, 4500 psi with quick connect fittings and 13-Inch premium pneumatic tires (double sealed).

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

24v and 36v Cordless Drills

!±8± 24v and 36v Cordless Drills

When most people think about cordless drills, they think about 18v or 14.4v drills. Those are the most widely made cordless tools and they will cover most tasks. But there's another class of cordless drivers that perform more demanding tasks. These would be 24 volt and 36 volt cordless drills. These higher voltage drills provide more torque and more run-time.

A good 18 volt cordless driver will drill holes and drive screws into the toughest wood. There are even 18 volt hammer drills. You can make a few holes into cinder block and possibly even small holes into concrete. But if you want to drill larger holes into concrete or drill lots of masonry holes, then you're going to need something more. There's only so much power you can cram into an 18 volt battery. A 24 volt battery will allow both more energy storage and more power to flow at once. A 36 volt battery allows even more.

For example, the Milwaukee V28 line, which is actually a 28 volt system, provides 600 inch pounds of torque. Hilti 36 volt drills provide even more. This isn't quite the same amount of torque you can get from a corded hammer drill, but it's close. It's enough to do almost any task a hammer drill will do. The Hilti products are very expensive, some over 00. But as with most things, you get what you pay for.

That means there are cheaper drills as well. For example, Black and Decker makes a 24v cordless drill. But a good quality 18 volt driver will perform better than a budget 24 volt drill. However, it will also cost more as well.

So if you're looking for more power and want to pick up a 24V or 36V cordless drill then make sure you check the specifications to make sure it actually has more battery capacity and torque. And also make sure you buy from a quality manufacturer.


24v and 36v Cordless Drills

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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Top 10 Uses For Pressure Washers

!±8± Top 10 Uses For Pressure Washers

Like many of you, I've used a lot of hand tools, power tools, and power equipment over the years. Table saws, routers, sanders, tile cutters, chainsaws, generators, nail guns, jack hammers, lawn mowers, pressure washers and more. Each tool has it's own special function and appeal. Of course, running the jack hammer to take out my front concrete sidewalk was the big he-man moment of all time for me. Wow! I'm sure the kids were incredibly impressed with their old man, and you can't even imagine what my wife thought. Ratta tat tat! But of all the above, nothing is as fun or satisfying to run as a pressure washer.

Power washers do jobs that just can't be done with any amount of scrubbing or elbow grease. Hot or cold water under pressure is just about one of the most powerful forces out there for cleaning, blasting or washing. The last time I used this tool it was to clean out 30 years of embedded dirt from the light colored brick on the front of my house. Worked like a charm, and gave me more bragging rights with the kids.

When it comes to pressure washers, please realize that they are extremely powerful and can be destructive and even dangerous if not used properly. Like any power tool, use caution and follow manufacturer's instructions carefully. Having said that, pressure washers can be used on many things; pretty much anything you need to clean or blast. Pressure washers come in various strengths and features, but today I just wanted to run down the top 10 uses for your pressure washer.

Washing a Car, truck or RV - With the right wand and attachments, washing your vehicle will be something to look forward to rather than dread. Washing a Boat - You know that mystery discoloration on your boat. Sort of like hard water stains on a glass. Well, never fear, pressure washers to the rescue! And barnacles and other nasties are no problem. Your boat will thank you. Cleaning a Sidewalk - Sidewalk cleaning is easy with this tool. Just remember, pressure washers can be extremely powerful and will actually destroy the concrete if you aren't careful. And remember, there is no more important safety rule than to wear these - safety glasses. (Any other Norm Abrams fans out there?) Cleaning Wood Decking - Here's the thing on wood. Don't linger too long or too close or you'll ruin whatever you are working on. Cleaning a Fence - Iron, chain link, wood, plastic, or whatever. It doesn't matter what your fence is made out of, a pressure washer will get into all the nooks and crannies no problemo. Cleaning Patio Furniture - Mold or dirt is no problem to remove from patio furniture. If you want to remove paint for repainting, there are pressure washers that will tackle the job. Watch for small bits flying and dream about how great your new furniture will look when you're done. Hey, if you don't like the color you can just hit it again! Washing Out a Gutter - No more yucky squishy goop to handle by hand. Just blast it out. Period. Cleaning a Driveway - Cleaning a driveway is really only done right with pressure washers. The right chemical cleaner with that right pressure washer and that oily dirty surface will become a thing of the past. Cleaning Siding - My personal favorite. It doesn't matter what the siding is because when you get done it will look like brand new. Again, just don't linger or get to close because you can harm the surface. Cleaning or Washing _____ - This is the best one because you get to fill in the blank. Just get creative and stay safe. Pressure washers are powerful, effective, fun, and your kids will be so proud of you!


Top 10 Uses For Pressure Washers

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