You can always add a lightweight tether conditionally, or just keep 20ft of 550 cord in your pocket when working on roofs/ceilings. 🤓
@gaugengotm2307Күн бұрын
1200 for cordless or 180 corded. Down time vrs convenience. Cordless burns up years before/ decade before a corded77 and $250 batteries take a ahit whenever they happen to. The torque is way different under load.
@donaldblank8873Күн бұрын
And it's bad practice to not use primer on water lines I fixed tons of them that simply come apart. And it's always a handyman that put a sprinkler system in.
@donaldblank8873Күн бұрын
You could vent that toilet and lav make it a 2 in. As long as it's above center line it will pass.
@frankfletcher9684Күн бұрын
Couldn’t have said it better. 100% agree. Thank you sir!
@miked8330Күн бұрын
For the slab you described the tools presented are not correct for the job.
@xkennedy2670Күн бұрын
As a 2nd year carpentry apprentice, i gotta say this is incredibly inspiring. Thank you. Sending this to all my fellow apprentices that i met in college.😊
@henryskinner1092Күн бұрын
Tool collection Tool collection Tool collection!
@Parker53151Күн бұрын
This gentleman is more well-spoken and thoughtful than many, many college graduates in have interacted with.
@jesseandmorganboone9709Күн бұрын
Had to drop a 👍 as soon as my guy said Jocko
@ABT1974Күн бұрын
Thank you... I have to jack up a shed to cut away the old floor and build a new one. I just bought four of these yesterday and they came with no directions. Your thorough, straightforward explanation of how they work and what to watch for is immensely helpful.. thank you
@seancasey2444Күн бұрын
I thought this was Scott's channel what is this a commercial.
@xascanioКүн бұрын
Great video - wish I had seen this sooner! Thank you!
@flpmlks5181Күн бұрын
finish your piece, turn off the forge, take a look at it...and criticize it rigorously! i wasn´t good in anything from the bat. just learn, how to deal with frustration and decide to make it less bad next day. and give your first product that you are proud of to someone.
@kansasscout4322Күн бұрын
Sound advice. I'm retired now but I underpriced my work just to get a toehold in the biz. It did get me some work. Small stuff. I was afraid of Remodeling because of the potential for bad surprises. A good friend got burned for $20,000 by a customer who directed lots of extra work but refused to pay for. He was too trusting and lost in court. I've turned away a few. Just threw them a high price. I wish I had priced my work better from the start.
@shannonlawsonnashvilleКүн бұрын
I grew up using a monster maul. I don’t hate it like you do, and actually, I wish I still had it. But I totally agree with you on the Knipex. I wound up with one in my tool kit mysteriously. Don’t know where it came from. But it is absolutely the best slip joint plier I have ever used.
@kansasscout4322Күн бұрын
I just found a Nichols Square last month.
@Andy-jl2rmКүн бұрын
Wow
@Andy-jl2rmКүн бұрын
W
@iammaximus614Күн бұрын
… stringing us along 💭
@ecuadordave8076Күн бұрын
Thanks for the Blessing of tool Ideas. I like the chalk line.
@michaelbyrne8860Күн бұрын
Jesus was a Son of a Carpenter who later became a fisherman! A Fisher of Men. My Stepfather was a carpenter from Chicago who could build anything with a SkilSaw worm drive, hammer, speed square and a Craftsman's 25' tape! That most men couldn't build with a table saw! Enjoy your video it brought me back to the day when he brought a 3rd Grader to a summer jobsite to work! Not stand around and dig for fishing worms! To build things with your bare hands & tools is a blessing! That's why most carpenters prefer to work for themselves! They take pride in the work they've just completed! and don't need someone to tell them what a great job they did...! They can just step back and look up and around to see their work! It speaks for itself!
@tuberocker69Күн бұрын
Walking away from a front tensioning Stihl is a bit harsh... I recently purchased an ms170 for limbing and am in love with the thing! Of course, I modded it with steel felling dogs as well as a oem side tensioner (both done very cheaply and easily) The 170 is now the one saw that never leaves my side. Who would've thought?
@michaelkooreyКүн бұрын
I thought you had a sound effect of a crow when you mentioned crowbar... There isn't, there was just a crow outside my window making themselves known when you brought it up.
@mrkrause3Күн бұрын
Funny….we’re the same age, and we have mirrored disciplines. I’ve told a lot of younger that disciplines are important and foundational. But I’ve also told them that disciplines are something that you decide to do, and not to expect much applause or support from those around you…..but looking at your comments….that’s a lot of praise!
@marcoantonioretamoza2 күн бұрын
Que lindo que toda su vida se la paso trabajando como dice usted, es una verdadera Bendición 😮 🙋🇲🇽
@toddwheeler15262 күн бұрын
Started with Plumb, Vaughn and Hart hammers. Still have most of them although I need about 6 new handles. Many sizes, types and smooth and corregated. 47 years, now retired. Thank you sir for all the great videos and the memories that they bring back.
@gmilla28252 күн бұрын
Was genuinely expecting EC to build a door and show us how he does it… disappointing
@justindtackett2 күн бұрын
This channel is so good.
@garysavala6652 күн бұрын
Where’s the fiberglass
@pamelah64312 күн бұрын
When you start talking the literal split-second the video starts, the tv audio cuts off the original couple words. On my tv it starts with you saying "Changed."
@nathanhawkins41082 күн бұрын
Absolutely well said and spot on on how to keep a family fed, and the struggles of doing it thank you 🙏
@nathanhawkins41082 күн бұрын
Absolutely well said and spot on how it feels to keep the family fed thank you 🙏
@nathanhawkins41082 күн бұрын
I meant actually meant this for the other video, but I enjoyed this one as well
@xxakli2 күн бұрын
This guy gets it . . .
@michealferrell16772 күн бұрын
Great stuff ! Thanks for
@dianeardolino17492 күн бұрын
Thank you for the great advice.
@t-bone94032 күн бұрын
Hahaha, sell my motorcycle ? We cannot be friends now. Buh bye.
@jasdub7652 күн бұрын
been following your channel for quite a few years now and love how it's evolved over time to giving life advice vs building things (both of which I love). Thanks man
@tristanconnolly56752 күн бұрын
Nice.
@anonymousperson25782 күн бұрын
Col. 3:23
@tristanconnolly56752 күн бұрын
Nice.
@arthurgabriel35042 күн бұрын
My first source is salvaged old forest wood that is dimensional lumber and when I take down an old home or building (free to owners) I save the lumber. Prime lumber get saved for big contractors. Cabinet maker I use hard woods most of the time from Woodsmith or Frank Paxton
@anonymousperson25782 күн бұрын
A true craftsman.
@tristanconnolly56752 күн бұрын
Nice.
@frankmartin-adirondackcampcab2 күн бұрын
Carry less more easier trips are more productive and last the day
@Recklessjellyv.22 күн бұрын
Let all the discipline shit jocko tate crap go and read the tao te ching, learn to be the way. Ignore the alpha male bullshit
@tristanconnolly56752 күн бұрын
Nice.
@rodneyrash2 күн бұрын
I've been watching your Channel for quite some time now. I love the work you do but what I really enjoy is your Insight on your trade and all the practical advice you give. It's like sitting down with a master Craftsman and learning from them. thank you for sharing your in-depth knowledge over the years.