On 9/13/2013 10:22 PM, Manfred Mornhinweg wrote:
Peter,
I like your point of view!
What do you use grinding wheels for, when they are worn down almost to
the hub? I have quite a few of them, and I hate throwing them away...!
And the last two centimeters of a welding electrode? That's good steel!
Last centimeters? No Problem. I use a MIG welder.
I re-use the solder that comes out of my solder sucker. I always empty
it into a small container, and when that container is full, I melt the
solder in an old pineapple can, sweep off the dirt and oxides from the
top, and pour it into bent aluminium sheet molds to make long bars with
triangular cross-section. I use those for coarse soldering work, along
with some paste flux, on stuff like copper piping and zinc plated rain
gutters. Since working in electronics, I have never needed to buy
plumber's solder.
And here I don't even reuse PL259s.
Some kinds of thin metal saw blades are hard and elastic enough to find
a second life as springs.
And living in Chile, I use one peso coins as washers. They are small
coins, made from a pretty good aluminium alloy, it's easy to drill a
hole into them or even just drive a nail through, and at 500 pesos to
one dollar they are far cheaper than real washers! That's the good side
about inflation.
Manfred
many just cant seem to throw a worn out tool away.<
That's why I have so much junk out in the shop, or suffer from that TMS
malady. TMS = Too Much Sh...er Stuff.
BTW I just put new filter in my all shop fans/filters. Instead of
$300-$500 for an all shop fan/filter, I purchase inexpensive 20 X 20"
window fans. Then tape a 4" X 20" X 20" pleated, 1 micron furnace
filter to it.They move a lot of air and two of them do a really good job
of keeping the air in the shop clean. I had used 5 micron filters and
they lasted about 6 months even with the welding. I'm trying the 1
micron which work very well, but I'm afraid they aren't going to last
anywhere near 6 months and they run about $34 each.
Depends on the tool. An old worn file grinds down real well to make a
scraper. Broken drills and small end mills and taps grind down well
to make the tool bits for a boring bar or even fly cutter bits.
So far, I use carbide inserts on fly cutters and face mills and there's
not much to salvage once those are worn out.
73
Roger (K8RI)
broken end mill or slot drill can be ground down to make a D bit -
while an old file can also be ground to make a spade bit. Old hacksaw
blades are good for packing. A broken end mill or drill can even with
suitable annealing be ground to make a suitable fly cutter tool to
cut an involute gear tooth form - after re-hardening.
Waste not, want not!
73
Peter G3RZP
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