great suggestions Dale.
The sand paper is probably the only thing I've ever organized as I was 
going through loads of it at one time.
clamps, spring loaded punch, some small chisels, a nice new hand saw for 
rough and fast cutting.





On Fri, 2 Jan 2009, Dale Leavens wrote:

> Jig saw and saber saw are different names for the same thing.
>
> Not too sure what "essentials" I would buy from Home Depot, depends a lot on 
> what you already have.
>
> A good quality framing square has a lot of uses, cheap ones will bend. A 
> decent trisquare. One almost always has some use for a good hand saw from 
> time-to-time. No one ever has too many clamps. A good rubber coated dead blow 
> hammer I am always reaching for now that I have one. Chisels, either a set or 
> a couple of good say Stanley, 3/4 inch, half inch maybe one inch and quarter 
> inch and an oil stone to touch them up on. A spring loaded center punch to 
> help accurately locate screws and drill holes in the middle of hinge and 
> other hardware holes. A good collection of sheets of sand paper. You might 
> want to label or organize it so you know what is what, something I so far 
> have resisted doing. Everyone should have an organized sandpaper collection. 
> If your store sells screws in boxes you might like to buy a collection of 
> them, round head and bugle head say 3/8ths up to 3 inches but bigger 
> increments as you get to the longer ones. Say 3/8 #4, 3/4 #6 , 1 inch #6 
> and/or #8, similar
  i
> nch && a quarter, inch & a half, maybe 2 and three inch.
>
> There is a pretty good start and will probably use up more than two hundred 
> bucks.
>
>
>  ----- Original Message -----
>  From: john schwery
>  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com
>  Sent: Friday, January 02, 2009 3:36 PM
>  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] shopping essentials
>
>
>  Spiro, if you do any cutting of angles, I would get a sliding bevel t
>  square. I don't think that is the correct name but the thing is made
>  of 2 main parts so you can get an angle, lock it in place and
>  transfer that angle to a saw.
>
>  earlier, Spiro, wrote:
>
>  >Hi,
>  >I am in a fortunate delemna.
>  >I have been given $200 in Home Depot gift cards.
>  >I could buy stuff I'll never use; or get essentials.
>  >Though you guys use things I may not for preference or needs, I was
>  >wondering what are the
>  >essentials you would be sure to have on hand if you were going browsing
>  >there.
>  >Or, what new gizmo is a must have for you?
>  >I have enough drill bits. I have almost enough allen wrenches, need
>  >phillips screwdrivers (never have enough)
>  >I could use Super Glue pens, silicone cawk, teflon tape, and stuff like
>  >that.
>  >What would you folk s get to have around or that must buy?
>  >Do you know if they have any repair services?
>  >I have a Makita drill and a Makita saber or jig saw (what's the
>  >difference again?) that have hit the deck too many times
>  >and need repair.
>  >So can we spin this one for a while?
>  >Thanks for all previous and past info.
>  >
>  >
>  >No virus found in this incoming message.
>  >Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com
>  >Version: 8.0.176 / Virus Database: 270.10.2/1871 - Release Date:
>  >1/1/2009 5:01 PM
>
>  John
>
>  [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>

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