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Other DIY thread

Discussion in 'General' started by CrapBag, 21 Apr 2021.

  1. CrapBag

    CrapBag Multimodder

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  2. mrlongbeard

    mrlongbeard Multimodder

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    Do you wear glasses, or are you going to wear safety glasses, if so the over the ear ones may not be comfortable and or fully seal against your noggin, otherwise balance how often your going to use them V's the cost.

    Screwfix is a reputable retailer, so everything should be fully CE /UKCA compliant as PPE and not some back market crap, so don't overthink it, if it were me I'd be going 3M, trusted brand, comfortable, good quality and will last you a while.
     
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  3. ElThomsono

    ElThomsono Multimodder

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    Exactly this. I have a cheap Stanley pair and a cheap-ish 3M pair, both work perfectly well. Even a set of foam ear plugs would suffice, but owning a set of defenders that you can just pop on and off makes you more likely to use them.
     
  4. ModSquid

    ModSquid Multimodder

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    Cheers chaps!

    Based on available stock I went with a combination of the above in the end - the Stanley over-ears (so I'll have to see how they fare with safety goggles - I'm not putting my head that close to an angle grinder and coming away still able to hear the music but without being able to see the disco lights) and the 3M in-ear plugs (Saturday morning techno moved to kitchen speaker instead).

    Been to Screwfix to pick them up, brunch done (priorities) so now like all good workmen I'll put the kettle on and THEN get down to it.
    :thumb:
     
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  5. ModSquid

    ModSquid Multimodder

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    Well, this is still an ongoing saga. After much procrastination and trying to "do other smaller, easier tasks first", it turns out I only had stone-cutting discs for the tool. Then by the time I chose which ones I thought I needed, the shop was shut. So back off down there as soon as it opens this morning and the strategy is now "it's a fkg demolishing tool - stop overthinking everything and just take the damn machine out in small pieces and get it fkg done".

    But one last thing to overthink first - what's the difference between stainless steel and "metal"? They have general 1.6mm multi-purpose blades, cheaper "metal-cutting" ones (only 1mm thick), stainless 1mm ones, or just go with Bosch 1mm or De Walt 1.2mm? The last two branded ones got some crap reviews, whereas out of many submitted, the Erbauers were better received but across only a few opinions. CBA having to go back to the shop to return anything so was going to middle-ground it with the De Walt ones unless anyone has any experience...

    I actually had a dream about this last night. I'd managed to get it out from under the worktop, but it was leaking over the floor. Don't know if that's a warning or an omen. I have set a deadline of 1330h to have this done.
     
  6. DeanSUNIAIU

    DeanSUNIAIU Modder

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    I’ve used the Erbauers to cut nails, screws, a metal hand banister, segments of copper pipe and pretty much everything inbetween. Got em from screwfix, think it was 5/8 I can’t remember for less than a tenner.
     
  7. mrlongbeard

    mrlongbeard Multimodder

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    Get the / any good quality 1mm ones, they'll cut quicker than 1.6mm, sure they wear faster but quicker cuts is the name of the game.
    A bit of pressure and mostly let the weight of the tool do the work, don't muscle it or lean on it too much, also remember these are 1mm thin discs spinning at a million RPM's, do not torque the blades, keep all your cuts straight, wear eye protection.
     
  8. DeanSUNIAIU

    DeanSUNIAIU Modder

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    My mistake, I thought you were referring to oscillating tool blades.
     
  9. Cheapskate

    Cheapskate Insane? or just stupid?

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    A little late, but for angle grinding I use a hardhat with a full face shield, glasses, ear plugs AND a respirator. The stuff you breathe in from the abrasive disc is wicked.
    -Oh, and heavy gloves. I forgot them once, and was promptly gifted a bit of sub-dermal 3m abrasive pad.
     
  10. Byron C

    Byron C Multimodder

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    So.... anything I can do about seized radiator bleed valves? Besides dumping loads of WD40 in there in an attempt to penetrate and loosen the threads, because that hasn't worked. I've already sheared one off, luckily without causing a leak.

    Sadly these are the older "integrated into the radiator" type, as opposed to being on a removable plug.
     
  11. Goatee

    Goatee Multimodder

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    Got a picture?
     
  12. Byron C

    Byron C Multimodder

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    Sure do.

    That kind of bleed valve:

    [​IMG]

    Not this type, which would be much easier to replace:

    [​IMG]
     
  13. ElThomsono

    ElThomsono Multimodder

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    I'd probably replace the radiator to be honest? They're not mega expensive, and am I right in saying it's a rented place?
     
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  14. Goatee

    Goatee Multimodder

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    If you own the place I would just replace rad.

    If you cant then I would isolate radiator, buy some replacement bleed screws and drill the old one out. If you set the drill to turn the same way as the bleed screw when drilling, it might even undo the screw for you.
     
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  15. Byron C

    Byron C Multimodder

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    That's what I thought would be the case, tbh.

    I do indeed rent, so it's not strictly my problem to solve. But once Christmas is out of the way we are going to start looking at a mortgage application and buying somewhere. Our tenancy renewal is due in a couple of months, so we're going to need to talk to the landlord about a rolling tenancy or short-term extension or something like that anyway. There's going to be a bunch of stuff that needs doing before the next tenant comes in.
     

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