Cellphones are a game changer. Especially because you can use them as a hotpsot for internet. With the caveat that even most 'unlimited' plans will limit your amount of computer tethering.eliyama said:Back in the day, what they accomplished was difficult because employers wanted a landline; today with cell phones are a game changer.
Look at the title of this area of the forum...it is "choosing the right vehicle" and the sub section is "vans". That means they posted in a forum area where they did not have to specify what they are discussing because it was already written out in the header.Cammalu said:Colomap. You don’t specify brands for what? A car? A van? An RV? Equipment? Might help to know what you are looking for
I've spent over $400 w/ Harbor Freight in the last year. Mostly smaller tools and parts for solar things. Wire strippers, crimpers, heatshrink, terminal rings, parts bins, work lights, cable cutters, etc. It hurts a lot less when it's a tool I know I won't use much. And yes, if the quality isn't up to par, I don't feel as bad since it was cheap. But I can't say I've noticed any lack of quality. I kinda love HF.Calaverasgrande said:Harbor Freight is where I buy tools I only need to use once or twice. Otherwise I bite the bullet and buy the real thing. Though to be honest that is getting more difficult as once trusted brands get bought out by newer companies that are moving much more volume.
Made in China is relative though.
My old Makita cordless drill which has lasted me 10+ years was apparently made in China. I just noticed that last night as I was crawling around under my bed platform doing some work on the van. That drill has been on many 12-16 hour gigs where I was installing stuff constantly.
It's still solid as heck. Made in China but they specified the good plastic, the real metal, and a Made in USA Jacobs chuck.
Too bad I lost the 2nd battery! Hard to find 9.6V Makita batteries these days.
PS I did get my rivet nut installer at HF. Its kind of a piece of garbage with no instructions, but it's installed a couple hundred rivet nuts so far! I think it's going to catastrophically fail on rivet nut number 201.
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