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choppersquonk
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 31 ธ.ค. 2008
Icicle Dropping
Pulling down a large icicle from outside my upstairs bedroom window. My chairs below were ok 😁
มุมมอง: 117
วีดีโอ
What's In My ToolKit
มุมมอง 1073 ปีที่แล้ว
Sharing the contents of my toolkit, removing tools one by one.
Trampoline Setup - Leaf Spring Type
มุมมอง 1873 ปีที่แล้ว
See how to setup a leaf spring -type trampoline.
Tool Bag Wheel Repair
มุมมอง 3.9K3 ปีที่แล้ว
How to repair a bad or wobbly wheel on a rolling tool bag. My Tool bag became hard to pull, so that’s when I noticed the wheel issue.
I can see why you skipped over getting the shaft out of the wheel, Jesus! Stabbed myself twice, finally had to drill through the bearings and mangle the side plastic to get it out! On my way to skate shop now to get bearings and then hardware store for the rest. What a PITA this is to do, mine is a Stanley and I've sent terse words to them regarding the repair ability of this style bag!
I agree with you, I had the same problem too. I had to cut the metal rivet with a metal cutting disc on both ends to be able to tap out the axle with a screwdriver, then the wheel slid out. I believe that Stanley is building these bags to be unserviceable and disposable because of how they are assembled with unremovable rivets.
I don't think Stanley makes these, there are loads out there with different colour schemes that are identical in every way.
On mine the shaft came out of the wheel not too bad, but yeah that’s a pain if it doesn’t
Amazing
Nice 👍
I believe those bearings are the same thing you would find on roller blades. As a roller hockey player, I know folks go through those bearings and trash them. A hockey players trash would work perfectly for a rolling bag. My bag issue is the wheel has one side gone flat making for a loud thumping as it rolls around. Because the bag still 'works' I'm not sure the effort is worth it at this point. I also would have additional expense of purchasing a replacement wheel.
Nice one.£150 tool bag no chance to tight DIY man 🇬🇧
Too tight how?
@@choppersquonk it means won't spend a penny Too Tight UK lingo Some tool bags £150 over the pond
@@Allegedly2right I see 👍
NICE. This is the same setup as my Husky tool bag, and my wheel finally did the same thing as yours after 2 years of having 90lbs in it, with a 75lb bucket on top of it and running it down stairs. I'm gonna try to track down some bearing and do this swap! I knew how to get it apart, just didn't know what I'd find in the wheel and I can't be down my bag for more than a day. Thanks man!
I initially had a husky one and it Unfortunately Got stolen from my work van…my colleague said his Husky had a wheel go also
@@choppersquonk they're tanks honestly. I never expected it to last 2 years with what I put it through, but it's held up well! I wanted a Milwaukee pack out, but the areas I go it would be way too big and a pain in the ass.
@@choppersquonk just so I'm clear, I'm looking for 7/8" OD x 5/16" ID bearings?
@@xracerx26 That sounds about right, I can check tonight when I get home to confirm
@@choppersquonk I'd appreciate it! I've found some 7/8 OD bearings on McMaster Carr, but the ID is 3/8. I'd have to experiment with how that would work with a 5/16 bolt. It was hard to tell from the video on if I could use a different diameter bolt with the wheel housing. Also if you could measure the width/depth of the bearing I'd appreciate it!
Wow that's very clever, you are the MAN!!! Thanks for sharing. #PEACE✌🏾
Thanks!
Great mod!
Very nice
Good idea!
Great stuff
It's an 1 year old video but I tend to used the Dishwasher basket... it comes in different sizes and styles
Cool
ok.
I love rubbing across a forehead slapping tip - the washers on rivets is one of those - entirely independent of the rest of the video. I'd never though of that that it seems obvious in hindsight. I'm mentally leafing back through all the times I gave up on riveting something that this tip would have solved.
I’m the same! I stumble across seemingly simple things periodically that make great sense that I wished I thought of long ago
I bare ground wire, 14AWG, to keep sockets together. And I think it's hard to hold the rail with rivets/screws: I'd loop a cable tie around the pipe & through the fabric.
I used rivets, actually not hard at all. I use it every day for work and it is still holding strong. This is the second tool bag I’ve done like this (first one was stolen). It holds quite securely.
Also, the bare wire sounds like a decent idea for sockets, but opening and closing often would be a nuisance, no? Carabiner easy to open and close often….
Genius
I respect the Canadian tire special bag man I myself have ya maximum bag not the same one but still
The price was right... I had a Husky one from Home Depot but it got stolen...
Good idea thanks for sharing. Uni bits or step bits work well at making clean holes in plastic.
Very nice! Keep It Simple, Stupid.