Monday, July 29, 2024

A Fancy Dead Blow Hammer, a Back-Saving Quick Lift, and a Bargain Router Plane | Tools Unleashed 02

Ready to get your hands on some BackSide? Backside Sandpaper!

Welcome to another Tool Unleashed, where I provide first impressions and mini tool reviews for your enjoyment. UNLEASH THE TOOLS! 

Impact Poly Dead Blow Hammer – Retails for $104. Sent to me for free. No affiliate link.

This dead blow hammer is quite expensive  at about 5x the cost of competitors. It’s truly the kind of tool you can pass down to future generations as it’s made with a welded steel frame (with a lifetime guarantee), has a soft yet tough chemically-bonded poly coating, and features a completely open head cavity where the shot is free to move back and forth for very effective dead blow action. Nice! But is it worth it? That’s for you to decide.

Irwin Quick-Lift Construction Jack – Retails for $99. Sent to me for free. Amazon affiliate link.

When these jacks came into the shop, I thought they were neat but didn’t immediately see a use for them. Then, I had to move my bench. I’m trying to respect my back as much as possible these days so I needed a safe way to get the bench onto some dollies. That’s when I remembered I had these jacks. Within minutes I had the whole bench fully mobile without risking life and limb. That’s just one use-case and I’m sure I’ll come up with more in the future.

Melbourne Tool Router Plane – Retails for $169. Sent to me for free. Affiliate Link.

This is a no-frills workhorse of a router plane with a reasonable price to match. In use it’s solid, capable, and gives great results. The blades are bedded at 50 degrees which means we’re not dealing with any L-shaped blade sharpening. You can sharpen these blades as easily as a chisel. If you don’t need all the bells and whistles and you want a good solid-performing router plane, this one is worth a look.

The post A Fancy Dead Blow Hammer, a Back-Saving Quick Lift, and a Bargain Router Plane | Tools Unleashed 02 appeared first on The Wood Whisperer.



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Saturday, July 27, 2024

Humidity Issues

There are times when we adopt a practice for good reason where others get away with something and we wonder how they do it. In general, for we woodworkers, this is not something we practice and our good reasoning allows for something others utterly disallow. In two different cafes, I found cleats screwed beneath the...

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Saturday, July 20, 2024

New Discovering

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Thursday, July 18, 2024

Handworking Housing Dadoes

After sixty years of working wood you develop your pieces using systems you either designed and developed or you adopt concepts of working as standard practices that make life practical. Those that know me and my work know that I developed my mortising guide to guarantee perpendicularity and parallelity to every mortise hole. For the...

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Saturday, July 6, 2024

Just Another Trade Secret

Things come to us in the moment and then we leave it alone for decades and just use it ourselves. I’ve got so many it’s hard to keep up with myself sometimes. Sometimes deep and flawed surfaces in our wood end up on the inside, underside and back of a cabinet and we never touch...

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Friday, July 5, 2024

Planes Away

I have written quite substantially about the advantages of owning and using different bench planes. Bench planes are the most significant group of planes we use in our everyday bench work. It’s that wonderful category of a handful of bevel-down planes we hand tool woodworkers rely on for all our general straightening, levelling and otherwise...

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Monday, July 1, 2024

Making Up Lost Time

In some ways, this closing week was my best week in three months since the attack on me that resulted in a cowardly attacker breaking three of my favourite ribs. It wasn’t just my ribs that were seriously damaged though, other injuries with the broken ribs ultimately and literally brought me down. There hasn’t been...

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