Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 16 to 27 of 27

Thread: Do you re-purpose things to use in the shop?

  1. #16
    Quote Originally Posted by Keith Weber View Post
    It's called hoarding. I try to refrain from it as much as I can. I have a friend who takes it to the extreme. I asked him one day why he had a jar full of those rectangular, metal knockouts from putting circuit breakers in an electrical panel. He said you never know when you need a little piece of metal for welding practice or something like that.

    I call his 3000 sq ft the labyrinth. There's a narrow little maze to follow to get around the shop, and everywhere else is stacked 7-feet high with junk. It's okay to keep stuff in supply that you have a legitimate, near term use for, but storing stuff just in case you "might" be able to find a use for it again is just hoarding.
    Yeah, you're right Keith - there's a balance. My shop and storage are pretty well organized and work very well for me. YMMV.

    Have a good one,
    Fred

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Wakefield, MA
    Posts
    509
    Cat food cans for glue and thinned varnish application.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    E TN, near Knoxville
    Posts
    12,298
    Quote Originally Posted by Keith Weber View Post
    It's called hoarding. I try to refrain from it as much as I can. I have a friend who takes it to the extreme. I asked him one day why he had a jar full of those rectangular, metal knockouts from putting circuit breakers in an electrical panel. He said you never know when you need a little piece of metal for welding practice or something like that.
    I call his 3000 sq ft the labyrinth. There's a narrow little maze to follow to get around the shop, and everywhere else is stacked 7-feet high with junk. It's okay to keep stuff in supply that you have a legitimate, near term use for, but storing stuff just in case you "might" be able to find a use for it again is just hoarding.
    I agree, Keith (except perhaps with the "near term" qualifier).

    I've been around serious Certified Card-carrying Horrible Hoarders and it is in fact horrible. I few years ago I remodeled a basement (built two bedrooms and a bath) in a house and when I got there the basement was, as you say, piled 7-high with "valuable" stuff and the only walking space was a path from the steps to the outside door. You would have had to climb or tunnel to get to the "valuable" stuff. It took (that family and me) all of the first day just to clear out where the rooms were going. I think I made 7 trips to the goodwill with my truck full and they ordered a storage shed for the "extra valuable" stuff. Hmm....

    I too think the balance is extremely important, but balanced with what a person does with their life (and their shop). As I mentioned, I do keep a lot of spare things for the farm - I call them "supplies." For example I have a shed full of steel angle iron, square tubing and rod. Shelves with aluminum stock, brass, steel in the room with the welders. A room in one shed with fencing materials, spare sawmill parts and big fasteners. Another shed room with electrical supplies. A room in the barn with extra animal medical things like syringes and extra dewormers plus salvaged styrofoam coolers and freeze packs for sending off fecal samples. Spare chain, clasps, hooks, cables, wire, ropes, nylon strapping, fasteners, hose, pipe, and water fittings for farm use. Another room packed with tools like big pry bars, tampers, special shovels. I keep lots of salvaged materials for re-purposing, steel and plastic drums, big sheets of HDPE, titanium tubing. A lean-to with spare lumber construction lumber, metal roof panels, and fence posts.

    If I put all this in my shop it WOULD be packed to the ceiling! But with a huge variety of "spare" materials on hand and the tools I can usually make anything I can imagine or fix I need for the farm, even at 1am on a Saturday evening. And guess where farmer friends bring their broken tools, hydraulic pumps, and furniture! Break a baler in the middle of putting up hay or a chain grab hook on the FEL while lifting a log - no problem, I can weld on a spare!

    In this setting I do question your "near term" use qualifier. But I guess "near term" is relative. For example, I got my 8000 lbs of steel stock at a steal of a price and have been using it for 10 years now.

    My shop IS in fact often cluttered. For me the problem is having multiple things going on at once; I clean up when I have time. But I love living like this - keeps me off the streets at night!

    I've read decluttering advice by so-called professionals that insist you throw out anything you haven't used in a year or some arbitrary time. Maybe some of these people never do anything interesting. Maybe [gasp] they watch TV.

    JKJ

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    SE PA - Central Bucks County
    Posts
    65,874
    It is my nature to re-use things...I truly hate throwing "good stuff" out, so yes, that practice extends to the shop. When I have something that can be used to improve or add something to my shop environment, etc., I take advantage of that. And for things that are very usable, but not usable by me, I try to choose donation rather than the trash as an alternative way to re-deploy them...I like the tax benefit from that, too.
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Rutherford Co., NC
    Posts
    1,126
    I am really big on reusing, repurposing, recycling, upcycling, etc. My parents were depression-era Appalachian kids so frugality was the norm in our household.

    I keep some of the reusable plastic containers from cottage cheese, yogurt, etc. for whatever comes up. My mom keeps them all.

    Right now I am repainting the house and the large yogurt containers are a great size for a paint pail, and the lids fit fairly airtight so it helps keep the paint fresh between coats. I have a small bucket with a handle that the dishwasher soap packs come in. It's perfect for carrying up and down the ladder with my soapy water for cleaning before painting. Then to paint I rinse it out and put my yogurt tub of paint, the brush, and a damp rag in it and I have an S-hook so I can hang it from the ladder frame while I paint.

    KIMG1678.JPG

    That damp rag I mentioned is a piece of one of my old work shirts. I have a huge bag full of old cotton shirts and underwear that were washed and cut up into usable rags when they developed too many holes to wear even for yard work.

    My dipper for pulling more paint out of the gallon into my paint pail is the measuring scoop from a pack of Oxyclean.

    Those fake credit cards, real (old) credit cards, old membership cards, and the like make great putty knives, especially for nail holes and such on interior walls and trim.

    I keep my Reebok shoe boxes to put together little service "kits" to use for household maintenance and the like. I have a plumbing kit with flux, brushes, solder, Teflon tape, basin wrench, faucet wrench set, PVC cement, tube cutters, etc. I have an electrical kit with tape, wire caps, cutter/stripper, wire, connectors, etc. A box of sandpaper scraps. A box of drilling accessories like doweling sets, countersinks, self-centering bits, screw extractors, etc. A box of router accessories like extra bits from basket sales at Woodcraft, base plates, wrenches, collets, etc.

    My paint cabinet its a couple of old medical cabinets that my MIL salvaged when they remodeled her work building several years ago.

    My main tool locker is made from the OSB off a double-door crate.

    When I worked at the furniture store I once built a loading dock out of old mis-matched waterbed frame parts (two-by-eights)
    Last edited by Charles Wiggins; 09-25-2017 at 11:13 AM.
    "Live like no one else, so later, you can LIVE LIKE NO ONE ELSE!"
    - Dave Ramsey

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    N.E, Ohio
    Posts
    3,029
    I use the bowls from Healthy Choice frozen meals for staining. I just wipe them out with a paper towel and reuse for further staining on the same project. When the project is done I pitch the bowl. Saves cleaning up a container between stain application on the same project.
    George

    Making sawdust regularly, occasionally a project is completed.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Missouri
    Posts
    2,152
    My favorite is quart size plastic milk containers. Cut them half in two. Great funnel with a handle.
    Jim

  8. #23
    Quote Originally Posted by John K Jordan View Post
    I've been around serious Certified Card-carrying Horrible Hoarders and it is in fact horrible. I few years ago I remodeled a basement (built two bedrooms and a bath) in a house and when I got there the basement was, as you say, piled 7-high with "valuable" stuff and the only walking space was a path from the steps to the outside door. You would have had to climb or tunnel to get to the "valuable" stuff. It took (that family and me) all of the first day just to clear out where the rooms were going. I think I made 7 trips to the goodwill with my truck full and they ordered a storage shed for the "extra valuable" stuff. Hmm....
    I have been too. My mother used to be that way, she'd go around to garage sales and buy things that "she might need someday". About 5 years ago when she moved, we went through her house and threw away, I kid you not, 5 complete dumpsters full of junk. She had stuff that she was hoarding for nearly 50 years in that house. We got her pared down to what she actually needed and nothing that she'd never use. I mean, she had nearly 1000 rolls of wrapping paper, most of which still had the plastic on them. It was just absurd. Today, she's a lot better. I guess growing up around WWII has something to do with it, where people just wanted stuff, for the sake of having stuff, just in case.

    It's fine if you're actually going to use it, but having no clue what it might be used for, but "maybe"... no.

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    SW Michigan
    Posts
    672
    Interesting thread. I guess I'm a pac rat in recovery. I've mentioned in other threads my daytime employer's journey into lean manufacturing and my implementing some of the 5's principles I've learned to my basement shop[Sort-Set in order-Shine-Standardize-Sustain]. I've sold quite a bit of excess stuff, donated some, and thrown away more in an effort to eliminate the stuff that somewhere my brain tells me I may need someday. I quit going to garage sales and have developed a resistance to buy something in the tool aisle because it's at close-out prices if I don't have an immediate need for it. I wait until I actually need something before I go out to buy it. I have a ways to go yet, I still have more stuff to sell off, but I'm enjoying my shop a whole lot more with much of the clutter gone and knowing where each tool is without digging through drawers searching. My work flow is more efficient and I can actually make a bit of money with my shop time as I seek to continuously improve my organization, efficiency, and work flow. I guess I may have gotten off track here...
    I do repurpose large plastic peanut butter jars. I find them useful for hardware, screws, dowels, and supplies I use regularly.

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Griswold Connecticut
    Posts
    6,933
    Same as the rest, I keep the little plastic containers for projects and mixing epoxy.
    My shop is also used for working on the cars, so a lot of car stuff finds it's way in there.
    What I really need to get a handle on is off cuts. I have some scrap wood bins that are getting a little out of control. I probably have enough exotic off cuts to keep someone making pens for a long time. I can't bring myself to burn it, and I always forget to haul it to the dump.

    One thing I did purposely buy, knowing it would be repurposed, were a 1/2 dozen moving blankets when we moved a bunch of furniture in a POD. Those cover my all of my machines when they're not in use. I don't think there's a natural fiber in them, so they don't absorb any humidity/moisture. My machines have had zero rust issues since I started using them.
    Last edited by Mike Cutler; 09-26-2017 at 12:15 AM.
    "The first thing you need to know, will likely be the last thing you learn." (Unknown)

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Sep 2016
    Location
    Modesto, CA, USA
    Posts
    9,997
    Well I think we all take a piece of wood and plane, cut joint it to fit. None of this buy precut wood and nail it together.
    The DPO of the house I am living in used 4x4's 8' long to build a 3.5 foot tall fence. They dug a hole 4.5' deep to get rid of the extra length. then they added concrete to make sure it would not move! Stupid me when I took the first one out I dug all the way to remove all the concrete. the next one I stopped at 2' deep or so since it just has a lawn on top.
    Bill

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Raleigh, NC
    Posts
    71
    I reuse things if I have a specific use for it. Once upon a time I would save things that looked handy and 99.9% of the time they became clutter. My weakness is jars, especially small ones.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •