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  1. #21
    shaun319 started this thread.
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    Quote Originally Posted by NHscrapman View Post
    Must have forearms like popeye with a twenty lb all steel tamper!!! but your right gotta do it or it's all loosy goosy and walks like junk. Mech posted somewhere he used a pair of large two handed pruners/lopers to cut wire harnesses(brilliant BTY) just had to find an old pair because I wasn't using my fiskars.
    not the biggest guy, just go in good short burts... lol



    I was using a pair of lopping pruners for rad hoses but they got dull quick (prob. cause they were cheap) and have stuck with a big kitchen knife, I have stuck with a pair of bolt cutters and a small pair of rope cutters for wire


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    I use pruning shears for wiring harnesses and an old table saw with a cut off blade to clean non-ferrous and cut windings.

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  4. #23
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    what are some of the "non-standard" scrapping tools that you use?

    I use the hooligans (children) with hammers and bats to make big things small.

    I use my Gerber multi tool 59 times a day. I keep it in my leg pocket of my carpenters jeans or overalls. I also keep a cheap pocket knife with a cheap led attached to it in my front pocket. I have several Gerber tools and as long as you understand when to grab a real tool they last along time. They save tons of time going back and forth for a screwdriver.

    I love me some fence pliers.

    I have lots of good axes and hatchets but I have some cheap hatchets and mauls that work excellent for digging, destroying, demolishion and very quick break downs. I keep them very blunt (quarter inch edge) to avoid chipping. I like to think of them as large chisels with handles.
    "And if your train's on time, You can get to work by nine, and start your slaving job to get your pay. If you ever get annoyed, Look at me I'm self-employed
    I love to work at nothing all day" -BTO

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  6. #24
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    Does the flat surface of my concrete driveway count as a special tool?

    Both for a quick file to look & see if something's brass, as well as a hard surface to bounce a stubborn component off of if regular tools aren't getting the disassembly done quickly enough.
    Out of clutter, find simplicity. --Albert Einstein

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    When scrapping a flashlight, leatherman, fencing pliers, cell phone, and magnet are in the pockets at all times. The leatherman and cell phone goes everywhere just as the dogs. The flashlight, magnet, and reaching tool are a multi-tool of their own. Don't ask how they are used, they are just available and every opportunity presents a challenge to use them.

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    My nose.

    Don't be afraid to give things a quick whiff before you start ripping stuff apart or touching stuff. Your nose will alert you before your eyes, sometimes.

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  10. #27
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    Couldn't live without this baby. Clip it to the sweat band on your ball cap and hands free light all night long.


    I love this for ripping wire out of old houses and knocking off al siding. Dead On annihilator, ask for it by name.
    Alvord iron and salvage
    3rd generation scrapper and dam proud of it

  11. #28
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    f150 dump truck

    Quote Originally Posted by shaun319 View Post
    I am sure a lot of us could fill a tool box with the same tools we use when scrapping/tearing down but I am curious as to some of the oddball tools you are using?

    one of my favorite things when breaking down smaller things especially if they are mainly plastic is a brick hammer



    not only do you get the solid hammering from the square face, but that chisel end is great for busting into things, works really well to tear small transformers off of boards, and if something ticks you off is a great way to re-leave the stress from it
    I am using a F150 converted in to a dump truck, it save a lot of time getting out of the scrap yards and also save my back unloading scraps.
    I been using this for over a year and it works great, a video is on Utube just type in F150 dump truck and also you can see it on firstontop.com. click on the scrap truck.
    My max load was 1400lbs and that is the most I would lift on a F150 frame. What I like about the truck is it is a small dump truck and easy to move around also easy on GAS.

  12. #29
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    Occam's Razor. Sirscrapalot, I expect at least 3 quotes before this thread is dead

    This is not a physical object but a belief that the simplest way is the best way. Google it. If a couple of bolts are rusted out on a bbq or motor, I don't take out the shiny ones and try the rusty ones; I go straight for the grinder! If I don't know where a driver bit I need is, I chisel the screwhead off! It all saves time!
    METAL IS MY MISTRESS...PLEASE DON'T TELL MY WIFE!

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