S
SammyInnit
Blimy , you lot on here must really put boot in on your tools , i been trade all my life , recently retired, same tools, never burnt one out or bent tool shoes ever , you must be vandals !
I'm not a dosser either.
Blimy , you lot on here must really put boot in on your tools , i been trade all my life , recently retired, same tools, never burnt one out or bent tool shoes ever , you must be vandals !
Either that or you just don't use them as much some others! Some tools do die early, but some don't. My first drill (Stanley-Bridges) was no longer acceptible when we went to 110 volt on site. My first Bosch SDS (bought 1981) did 20 years and only got replaced when the odd-shaped capacitor went pffft! and I couldn't source a spare, however its' replacement was 3-function (not two), had reversing, was more than twice as powerful, faster and was lighter to boot. A lot of tools get better and even HMRC allow you to write-off tools after 5 years (if you are limited). My current corded jigsaw will run rings round my first Bosch model. And if you've been using the same cordlesses for 20-odd years, then you'd be amazed at some of the stuff around nowadays. Times move on, the job changes and tools (generally) get betterBlimy , you lot on here must really put boot in on your tools , i been trade all my life , recently retired, same tools, never burnt one out or bent tool shoes ever , you must be vandals !
But even there things change and get better (mostly). I still have my old Elu MOF98 1/2in router from c.1982. It's 110v, it works, but against the current tool I use it's big, heavy (unwieldy), is single speed (almost all current 1/2in routers are variable speed), has a poor fence system and no dust extraction. That's why it got replaced. A lot of tools have similarly been replaced by faster/more accurate/cleaner/lighter/smoother tools over the years. I keep that router (and a number of old tools) only as a backup these days.same (mains ) power tools not battery tools
But even there things change and get better (mostly). I still have my old Elu MOF98 1/2in router from c.1982. It's 110v, it works, but against the current tool I use it's big, heavy (unwieldy), is single speed (almost all current 1/2in routers are variable speed), has a poor fence system and no dust extraction. That's why it got replaced. A lot of tools have similarly been replaced by faster/more accurate/cleaner/lighter/smoother tools over the years, I keep that router (and a number of old tools) only as a backup these days.
As i said, old doesn't necessarily mean good. So why keep heavy, poorly performing tools? Do you have Yorkshire blood or something?
Pardon me! I thought that was the reason for the serrations round the edges of pound coins - to give Yorkshiremen greater grip.....Excuse me !! Next you'll be claiming 50p's are shaped the way they are to facilitate the use of a spanner to get them out of a Yorkshiremans hand!