I'll have to work on the vocabulary.  I seem to say the same words over and 
over.  The all seem to center on family history too.  Son of a ...  And you 
little ...  History like that.  
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: NLG 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, June 02, 2008 9:39 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] business end of an air impact


  I agree with Bob. I have a 1/2 inch pneumatic impact gun and the ball is 
missing also. I do the same thing, making sure the socket is on the nut before 
hitting the trigger. Once in a while it will fall off and roll across the 
garage floor but that is the kind of thing that builds vocabulary!
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Bob Kennedy 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, June 02, 2008 21:20
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] business end of an air impact

  I'd still use it. Most of them have a ring that you have to wiggle the socket 
over and I haven't seen one of them yet that stays in shape after a couple 
years. The worst that will happen is the socket will spin off. You can control 
that by not hitting the trigger until you have the socket over the nut or bolt. 

  I have 2 3/8 drive guns and neither one holds the socket in place if I point 
it toward the ground. But I'm not spending a hundred plus while they still work 
good. 

  Remember sockets are somewhat heavy and aren't designed to fly. If it spins 
off it won't go far. It will dance around on the floor but you're certainly not 
going to get hurt from it. Just wait for it to stop spinning and start over 
again...

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Robert j 
  To: Blind Handyman 
  Sent: Monday, June 02, 2008 9:09 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] business end of an air impact

  All this talk reminds me that I have an air impact that I got free some time
  ago. I have not used it very often. It would be considered unsafe to use in
  its present condition but I take great care and I am aware of the problem
  and have not had a problem with it.
  Now here is the deal. The ball that is designed to stick out with a spring
  on the back side to hold the socket on, is no longer there. it is not worth
  having a shop repair it and probably not worth buying parts and trying to
  rebuild it myself.
  Does any one have any ideas short of making it another contribution to the
  scrap iron pile.
  Robert.

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