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most facile way to move heavy toolcase up/down stairs?



 
 
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  #21  
Old May 10th 04, 04:10 PM
Mike Gaspard
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"Rich S." wrote in message ...
"jakdedert" wrote in message
.. .


I, too, find that my little Gerber Tool solves well over 90% of my
'occasional' tool needs. While there's hardly a tool on it that I would

use
for a particular job if I had the 'real' tool at hand; the utility of

having
all those tools on my belt--all of the time--is liberating.


I wonder how many of those the TSA owns, now?

Rich "Honest, I forgot it was on my belt" S.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I almost forgot mine on my belt at the airport once. Luckily I
remembered in time and was able to run back and stick it in my checked
baggage. I was almost sick at the thought of having to turn it over to
Security.

I would rather leave my wallet at home than my Gerber. It's saved my
bacon more times than I can remember. Best $40 I ever spent.

Mike
  #22  
Old May 12th 04, 04:42 AM
sdlomi2
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"Alan Horowitz" wrote in message
om...
ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got
them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out
check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of
tool junkie genetic coding.

Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells
("stairs", to you land pukes)

Better approach?

Got room for a furniture-moving dolly(hand-truck?), the one with the
v-like belts that revolve on each step? s


  #23  
Old May 12th 04, 01:13 PM
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On Tue, 11 May 2004 23:42:20 -0400, "sdlomi2"
wrote:


"Alan Horowitz" wrote in message
. com...
ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got
them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out
check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of
tool junkie genetic coding.

Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells
("stairs", to you land pukes)

Better approach?

Got room for a furniture-moving dolly(hand-truck?), the one with the
v-like belts that revolve on each step? s


There are hand trucks with electric motors on them that drive grips
that allow it to climb stairs. You just get the truck in position,
push the button and the electric motor (geared way down) takes the
load up or down the stairs.

Would that work for you?

Corky Scott
  #24  
Old May 12th 04, 01:25 PM
rip
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Order a set of Type II antigravs. One pair should do it easily.
Federation StarFleet FSCM code 345273FW98DHRT53M598G0937DFG4456.

Alan Horowitz wrote:
ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got
them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out
check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of
tool junkie genetic coding.

Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells
("stairs", to you land pukes)

Better approach?


  #25  
Old May 12th 04, 03:16 PM
Ron Wanttaja
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On Wed, 12 May 2004 12:25:10 GMT, rip wrote:


Alan Horowitz wrote:
ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got
them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out
check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of
tool junkie genetic coding.

Better approach?


Order a set of Type II antigravs. One pair should do it easily.
Federation StarFleet FSCM code 345273FW98DHRT53M598G0937DFG4456.


No, the -456 is the "Lift Device, Anti-Gravity, Hemoglobin-Attractant"
model. You want the -457.

Ron "What is brain?" Wanttaja
  #26  
Old May 12th 04, 05:03 PM
rip
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True, Ron, but I prefer the -456 because it keeps the blood from rushing
to my head. Try it, you'll like it!!!

Ron Wanttaja wrote:
On Wed, 12 May 2004 12:25:10 GMT, rip wrote:



Alan Horowitz wrote:

ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got
them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out
check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of
tool junkie genetic coding.

Better approach?


Order a set of Type II antigravs. One pair should do it easily.
Federation StarFleet FSCM code 345273FW98DHRT53M598G0937DFG4456.



No, the -456 is the "Lift Device, Anti-Gravity, Hemoglobin-Attractant"
model. You want the -457.

Ron "What is brain?" Wanttaja


  #27  
Old May 12th 04, 06:06 PM
Rich S.
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"Ron Wanttaja" wrote in message
news
Order a set of Type II antigravs. One pair should do it easily.
Federation StarFleet FSCM code 345273FW98DHRT53M598G0937DFG4456.


No, the -456 is the "Lift Device, Anti-Gravity, Hemoglobin-Attractant"
model. You want the -457.

Ron "What is brain?" Wanttaja


If it was Ammeter, he'd get the -457 Magnum.

Rich "Peas through superior firepower" S.


  #28  
Old May 16th 04, 12:23 AM
Z
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In article , Andrew
VK3BFA writes
Z wrote in message
...
In article , Alan
Horowitz writes
ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got
them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out
check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of
tool junkie genetic coding.

Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells
("stairs", to you land pukes)

Better approach?


Get the bosun to carry your tools or help you carry your tools.
Webbing strop and ships winch.
Check out each job before starting and take less tools in a smaller
case.
Keep your own tools at home if the shipping company supplies tools and
use your own tools for homers when off tour.
See about your addiction. :-)


I managed a whole week once with a pinching driver!
I am a professed tool junkie as well but my van has no organisation aids
in it so there are tools and materials stuffed in the back of it so much
I can't find the tools I need.



Yep, I am a tool junkie as well - but I only carry the bare minimum in
the van, paranoid about them being stolen, and commercial insurance is
just toooo much. Lets face it, he who dies with the most tools/test
equipment wins......(not sure what you win, I just know that you do).

BTW - whats the most obscure specialised tool you own - you know,
something that was acquired in a moment of madness and never got used
- (this specifically exludes power tools, they are in a special
"sacred objects" category)...and where can I get a micro lathe cheap
for turning up capacitor shafts....

de VK3BFA Andrew


Got an Anatomy lab dissection kit yesterday for a snip GBP7 USD10. It
contains a decent scalpel, various scissors, tweezers pokers, prodders,
jabbers, impalers scrunchers and whatchamacallits. All in surgical
stainless steel. I'm thinking twice about donating my body to medical
science now though ;-)

Also they had a diagnostic kit at a song (otoscope/opthalmoscope) handy
for close inspection. I didn't have a look as my hands were manky and I
wouldn't want anything like that prodding about me after it had been in
my hands. I'll maybe go in with clean hands on Monday.



--
Z
Remove all Zeds in e-mail address to reply.
  #29  
Old May 30th 04, 09:39 AM
matt wilson
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Don't most boats have at least one deck winch?

"Alan Horowitz" wrote in message
om...
ET onboard a ship. Have decided after time to have own tools. Got
them packed into one of those larger wheel-around, pull-the-handle-out
check-in hard-shell Samsonites. Ends up being a bit heavy, cause of
tool junkie genetic coding.

Works great..... except when have to go up or down ladderwells
("stairs", to you land pukes)

Better approach?


 




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