I feel like (and look like) a nerd dictating my notes into this thing
("Note to self..."); however, walking through the jobsite, I'll see
dozens of items that need attention. I'll dictate 20-30 entries, then
transcribe them the next day. I couldn't live without my digital voice
recorder.
What's your most useful tool?
John Churchill
Builder and Cont. Ed. Instructor at Emory University
Author of www.renovation101.com
"Churchill" <jchur...@renovation101.com> wrote in message
news:1139602227.2...@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
I also do contracting, when i take an order or agree to do work over the
phone my most important tool is also a tape recorder. Who here hasn't been
screwed, doing contracting?
Take care,
Spike's homepage about the Ontario Govt.
http://thevandalnextdoordeaththreatsandmore.asar-intl.com/
"Churchill" <jchur...@renovation101.com> wrote in message
news:1139602227.2...@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
"Churchill" <jchur...@renovation101.com> wrote in message
news:1139602227.2...@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
"Spike" <sp...@asarian-intl.org> wrote in message
news:dsj30i$3n8$0...@pita.alt.net...
Define tool.
So either a notebook computer or a cordless drill (or utility knife,
pencil is up there, too).
Favorite tool would elicit more interesting answers than useful tool.
R
Just ask Linda Tripp.
Most likely nobody would care until you used it against them or played it
for someone else.
Just ask Monica and Bill
"Art" <begunaNOS...@mindspring.com> wrote in message
news:B79Hf.9373$Nv2....@newsread1.news.atl.earthlink.net...
>I am a general contractor, hiring subcontractors to do the work for me.
>So I don't own that many tools. However, my most useful tool has to be
>my digital voice recorder.
>
>I feel like (and look like) a nerd dictating my notes into this thing
>("Note to self..."); however, walking through the jobsite, I'll see
>dozens of items that need attention. I'll dictate 20-30 entries, then
>transcribe them the next day. I couldn't live without my digital voice
>recorder.
>
>What's your most useful tool?
The one between my legs !!!!
> What's your most useful tool?
I am an electronic technician and a computer repairer. My most useful
tool is my sense of logic followed closely by a 7-level screwdriver
(also known as a tweaker).
> However, my most useful tool has to be
> my digital voice recorder.
> What's your most useful tool?
It's probably a toss up between a phone & vehicle. Although my glasses
could be considered a tool. I wonder if clothing articles are considered
tools. Hmmmmmmm, maybe my toothbrush & razor.
Good question.
Useful, but the index finger is better for picking your nose and smoothing
caulk.
A pencil
A tape measure
A razor knife
A clean rag and last but not least
My helper, he is a real tool sometimes :)
Check out www.laserstreet.com for specs on what these things can do.
Mark
>In some states it is illegal to tape a call without telling the other side
>unless you are George Bush.
When the president does something, that means it's legal." Richard
Nixon (closely paraphrasing)
Remove NOPSAM to email me. Please let
me know if you have posted also.
>I think that is true in all states.
No. Less than half, I think, but certainly not all.
>
>Just ask Linda Tripp.
I guess she had legal fees, which her buddies probably paid, so she
got off very easy. She was in Maryland, where the inability to tape
someone has given me many problems. For example, my mother's
stockbroker would lie to her about what I said, and lie to me about
what she said. I should have gotten 3-way calling immediately, but I
wasn't smart enough.
>Most likely nobody would care until you used it against them or played it
>for someone else.
I agree. But in most cases, most of its usefulness is at those times.
>
>>
>>
>opps, my anwering machine did not disconnect when I answered the phone,
>It just happens that the conversation was recorded.
A very good idea. Unfortunately I didn't think of it until the broker
had lied her way to the money she wanted.
I had a machine that was designed not to turn off. I also preferred
it that way all the time, but it broke, and all the new ones turn off
when I pick up the phone. So I bought one like mine off of ebay, and
it worked fine except it was broken in the very same way as mine.
B&D Firestorm Cordless Hammer Drill 24V.
--
Thank you,
"Then said I, Wisdom [is] better than strength: nevertheless the poor
man's wisdom [is] despised, and his words are not heard." Ecclesiastes 9:16
computer/ internet.
So I don't have to read all the crap posted here that doesn't have to do
with home repair, or even the topic.
Steve
Thanks for the tip about the laser measurer. I didn't even know these
exist. I ran out this morning and bought a Stanley Tru-Laster from
Home Depot for $99. I measured the square footage of my house, and it
took me no time at all. This is an awesome tool and a great idea!
Thanks again,
And yet you teach building and construction? No wonder we have so little
progress in the use of new materials.
I was thinking along the same line, regarding the teaching aspect.
Then I remembered the phrase "educated idiot".
Oren
"My doctor says I have a malformed public-duty gland
and a natural deficiency in moral fiber, and that I am therefore
excused from saving Universes."
They are not an actual laser measuring device. I had this discussion here
before. The laser is merely a pointing device, and there is a clicking that
actually measures. Readings can be affected by textures, objects closer
than what you want to measure, and other things.
For work that doesn't require a measurement exact enough to cut, they are
very helpful. My wife bought me one of the packs that have all the gadgets
in it, with the leveler, and all. They work okay, but not great.
Steve
Stanley makes shoe making tools?
R
I seem to worry about a "GC" that buys everything at HD or Lowes....
I replace the filters in my furnace 1 a month but I don't think of it as a
tool.
They are awesome aren't they! The one I use (Disto Plus) has a
built-in 2X telescopic viewer for longer distances and Bluetooth so you
can transfer you measurements wirelessly to a PDA or Tablet pc with
Bluetooth and sketching software. Until you try this out for yourself
it is hard realize just how much time you can save while on site.
-------------------
Steve B,
The Stanley TLM 100, TLM 200, TLM 300 are made by Leica for Stanley in
Austria and are true laser measuring devices, as are all of the Leica
Disto products. They are not ultrasonic devices with a laser pointer -
yes even the $99 TLM 100 is a true laser device. Again, look at the
specs at www.laserstreet.com or other sites (just search on Disto or
Stanley laser meters).
For the rest out there: it does take a while to get use to measuring
with one of these. But once you are use to it you will find that it
will replace your tape for many situations but not all. I personally
keep a tape in my truck but have not used it at all in the last 6
months. Again, I do house measurements inside and outside for
appraisals, floorplans and as-built surveys for contractors and with a
+- 1/16th of an inch accuracy, I have found that I couldn't live
without it. I have cut my measuring time in half with it - not on
the typical rambler but on complex layouts and houses in the 4,500 SF
and higher category, especially the 9,500 SF house I did recently.
Mark K
"Federal law allows recording of phone calls and other electronic
communications with the consent of at least one party to the call. A
majority of the states and territories have adopted wiretapping statutes
based on the federal law, although most also have extended the law to cover
in-person conversations.
"Thirty-eight states and the District of Columbia permit individuals to
record conversations to which they are a party without informing the other
parties that they are doing so.
"These laws are referred to as "one-party consent" statutes, and as long as
you are a party to the conversation, it is legal for you to record it.
(Nevada also has a one-party consent statute, but the state Supreme Court
has interpreted it as an all-party rule.)"
> What's wrong with Home Depot?
>
They wallow in mediocrity. Many local lumberyards have better quality
wood at about the same price or a few pennies more. If you want premium
products, you can find better elsewhere. My local dealer will match or beat
any of their appliance prices and have better models available. Many of
their tools are "homeowner" grade, not what a pro really needs. Most of the
screws and fasteners they sell are crap compared to other brands from other
sources. like www.leevalley.com or www.mcfeelys.com
-> I am a general contractor, hiring subcontractors to do the work for me.
-> So I don't own that many tools. However, my most useful tool has to be
-> my digital voice recorder.
->
-> I feel like (and look like) a nerd dictating my notes into this thing
-> ("Note to self..."); however, walking through the jobsite, I'll see
-> dozens of items that need attention. I'll dictate 20-30 entries, then
-> transcribe them the next day. I couldn't live without my digital voice
-> recorder.
->
-> What's your most useful tool?
->
-> John Churchill
-> Builder and Cont. Ed. Instructor at Emory University
-> Author of www.renovation101.com
->
Sledge-O-Matic.
--
;^)~~~ Sue (remove the x to e-mail)
~~~~~~
"I reserve the absolute right to be smarter
today than I was yesterday." -Adlai Stevenson
http://www.suzanne-eckhardt.com/
http://www.intergnat.com/malebashing/
http://www.intergnat.com/pussygames/
>
I agree. HD is focused on sales. not quality. I've noticed that HD
used to carry more variety and brands years ago. A box of screws I
bought from HD are crap--never again will I buy fasteners made in
China.
Not disagreeing with you, but for many of us, going to a 'real' lumberyard
(aka trade lumberyard) means taking time off work, since they are only open
the same hours we work. In this town, the 'real' lumberyards are down to
two, and neither is full-line. The ma'n'pa hardwares are mainly garden and
knick-knack stores, due to competition from the national and regional
big-boxes and franchise chains. As a kid in a small town in another state,
pre-big-box era, the small local yards had such high prices that my father's
company found it more economical to send a guy and a truck up to the state
capitol, to buy direct from jobbers. I'm all for supporting the local guy,
but he ain't making it easy for me.
aem sends...
The pda I just love
:)
On 10 Feb 2006 12:10:27 -0800, "Churchill"
<jchur...@renovation101.com> wrote:
>I am a general contractor, hiring subcontractors to do the work for me.
>So I don't own that many tools. However, my most useful tool has to be
>my digital voice recorder.
>
>I feel like (and look like) a nerd dictating my notes into this thing
>("Note to self..."); however, walking through the jobsite, I'll see
>dozens of items that need attention. I'll dictate 20-30 entries, then
>transcribe them the next day. I couldn't live without my digital voice
>recorder.
>
>What's your most useful tool?
>
>John Churchill
>Builder and Cont. Ed. Instructor at Emory University
>Author of www.renovation101.com
>
Quite a lot.
There have been several other replies and I would like to add to them.
HD does not support 'the locals.' The tools they sell are not professional
grade, I.a. they won't last as long as the tools they sell at dedicated tool
stores. Their lumber is inferior quality (that's been said before) and much
of the rest of the products are as well.
My epiphany about HD was when I called them to get a shower stall. I had
the make and model of the unit, as I had seen it on display at that
particular store. The drone that answered the phone said something like
"I'll have to call Apex to get a price." To heck with that, I called Apex
direct and got the exact same stall without the HD markup.
IMO, if that weasel Robert Nardelli, the General Electric/Jack Welch reject
wasn't in charge, HD would still have stock splits every year to year and a
half. He's more interested in buying other successful companies and sucking
them dry. Apex wasn't much in their day, but they were good. Now they
stink.
Another case in point. I purchased a 'string trimmer' from a local store.
I also bought at the time several other things I needed to keep the trimmer
running for a while. I finally ran out of these items and went back to the
store I bought it from the purchase more. Although I regularly go into that
store, I hadn't noticed the string trimmers. Because HD now sells that line
of string trimmers, that local store does not sell OR service that brand.
>On Sun, 12 Feb 2006 04:57:56 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" <e...@snet.net>
>wrote:
>>"Churchill" <jchur...@renovation101.com> wrote in message
>>> What's wrong with Home Depot?
>>They wallow in mediocrity. Many local lumberyards have better quality
>>wood at about the same price or a few pennies more. If you want premium
>>products, you can find better elsewhere. My local dealer will match or beat
>>any of their appliance prices and have better models available. Many of
>>their tools are "homeowner" grade, not what a pro really needs. Most of the
>>screws and fasteners they sell are crap compared to other brands from other
>>sources. like www.leevalley.com or www.mcfeelys.com
>I agree. HD is focused on sales. not quality.
So is every corporation everywhere.
> I've noticed that HD
>used to carry more variety and brands years ago. A box of screws I
>bought from HD are crap--never again will I buy fasteners made in
>China.
In that case you won't want to buy any from McFeelys either. I just
looked up their catalog: Made in China, Taiwan, Korea,... seems to be
the origin of most of their screws. I haven't checked Lee Valley. Have
you?
Don't stop buying because of the point of origin. China makes crap and
China makes good stuff. McFeelys' specifies a higher quality than HD. At
least some of Lee Valley's ware come from China also, but they are still
better than HD.
They're like all the other box stores.. "we carry what the majority of
people will buy.. If you want something else, go somewhere else, we've got
money to make.."