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A
Project Farm
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Comments by "A" (@HypocriticYT) on "Project Farm" channel.
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Amazing the amount of effort put into all your videos. I’m sure it’s appreciated by millions 😊
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It is amazing what they can make today. My luck id set one of these one my truck by the rad and when the engine started the starter would fall into the rotating fan blade!! These would be great for 4wheelers that don’t have a method to charge the battery. Also fill a flat tire while far from civilization. Yup I’d want one in my 4 wheeler
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It's never good economics to buy cheap tools.
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I didn’t know turbocharged engines contaminate oil with fuel more than other engines but it makes sense with increasing pressures. Are supercharged engines also putting more fuel into oil?
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This shows that not all manufacturers tested their pliers for performance
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I use 5w30 in my 2002 Chev LS 1 and it has over 200,000 miles with no oiling issues and still as high oil pressure when new 😊
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I find Starrett punches are good 😊
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Back in the day I remember someone tapping a small hole in the top of a red tool box and installing a grease nipple. They actually opened the lock and filled every drawer with grease but wanted the nipple on top as a clue for the owner. Needless to say he was not impressed and spent half a day cleaning his toolbox in the parts cleaner tank. We had a 50 gal drum of grease with compressed air unit on the thing.
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Princess junk, all Chinese made. Have a torx set and the largest one broke. A long power bar from Princess the half inch stud shattered. Id rather have tools I don’t have to return and my knuckles don’t fly into a steel part when a tool fails. Also prices are being raised a lot lately, they jack prices to see if they will still sell. Many tools at Princess are way overpriced.
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I’ve moved a heavy commercial safe on a creeper, about 150 pounds per wheel, six wheels
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This is a tool that you know if you have a bad one immediately
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So these adapters have a finite life. Gone are the days when a tool outlasted your life
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I have an old two stroke 15 hp Evinrude outboard motor. A much lighter engine than the four stroke and they last forever. Hopefully I never need a four stroke outboard motor. Interesting to see the results of this video. A lot of marine stuff is overpriced and no better but let’s see here with the oils. I’ve always asked myself the question that is asked here. For my vehicles I use full synthetic Castrol motor oil.
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Perfect timing as I have time to coat my truck bed and the weather is cooperating
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If I need to cut with these and don’t have better suited tools available I have put the handle of these in a vice to put enough pressure to cut. That was a long time ago and now I have suitable tools, can never have enough
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Locking pliers need to withstand hammering because inevitably they are not long enough to have the leverage you need to loosen the bolt.
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DASH CAMS !!! I have had trouble finding one at a good price that actually works, doesn't blow fuzes and remains on when you want it on.
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I prefer the Olfa knife, one blade that can snap off so you have a fresh sharp blade over and over again 😊 can extend blade with one hand and costs less than any shown here 😊
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Doesn’t surprise me that German tools came out on top. Germans will not buy junk and not buy bad food, their culture demands quality.
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Seems none of them weld the break. Welding metals a good weld doesn’t fail and the material itself will fail first. Plastic welders do not bond the ends butted up together but stick on the surface only 😢
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Good to know about these. I have an old 9 inch grinder and it powers through anything makes jobs fast but it’s a heavy unit 😅
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I thought French made would give up without a fight
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Jack stand prices are commensurate with the price you place on your life 😮
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I bought a couple small bottles of ceramic finish. The directions have you prep the car as if you would paint it. Would be easier to shoot it with clear coat and the shine last for years without regular polishing
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Excellent idea to have this video, just share it to your wife’s phone 📞
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When we had Craftsman in Canada they were made in China. Can’t expect recycling trash metal to make quality tools. China won’t make good tools when North American companies only want to pay pennies per unit.
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In Canada we have Canadian Tire stores selling tools and more. should be called "China Tire" were far superior to the same type tools sold in Canada. Canadians got made in china tools while Americans got american made tools. My guess is Japanese made tools would be far superior. You Cannot save any $$ by buying cheaper tools, you actually lose, and may lose some flesh when a cheap tool slips/breaks and your hand contacts what you're working on only to have skin removed by sharp edged metal. Today you barely get what you pay for IF you get it at all. These videos over the years have saved me $$ but more importantly blood and flesh! Thank-you for your diligence and perseverance when making these excellent videos.
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An AC 225 Lincoln arc welder is under $500 and works very well. Don’t waste your money on inconsistent cheap welders because the weld can fail and possibly hurt someone
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Impossible to do but wouldn’t it be interesting to know how much $$ you have saved people when they avoided buying junk tools
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I like cords with locking ends.
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Fuel cans that remain upright are best. If your vent isn’t tight you’ll lose most of the fuel. I can’t see in the box of my P/U truck and lost about 4 gal. With the high cost of fuel this becomes very important.
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When a company spends more on advertising than development you can expect their product is mediocre 😢
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I have scissors make in Germany in the 1970’ and they are still working well
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Stihl chains are the best, cutting faster means less wear therefore less run time so less fuel used. Cut some old hard maple and you'll be glad to have a good chain. I agree never let the blade hit the ground, wrecks sharpness quickly. I always have 3-4 sharp chains so I don't have to quit and sharpen a chain. I can sharpen the chains later, actually I get the local small engine guy to sharpen them with his machine it keeps the angles better than I can. Chain cost should not be an issue, you get what you pay for with chains. My guess is you will get less sharpenings out of a cheaper chain.
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Dewalt 20V batteries weigh much less than their contractor 18V . The contractor grade batteries last much longer 😊
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I'll continue to use Castrol Syntec in my almost 20 year old Camaro SS, has lots of well enjoyed miles on it and still going strong with its LS1 engine.
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I like the old German knives with antler grips. They have quality steel blades and you know they are good because they are still around today in good numbers. Just harder to find one that shows less use. I knew an old trapper that used a three inch blade folder for everything including bear 🐻. Large blades are more difficult to use and only look impressive.
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I have a Stihl gas trimmer, never considered electric one with the work mine has to do. At least I can fill it up quickly rather than wait for a charge.
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I have a 90 degree quarter inch corded drill and it is great when you need one. Not something you normally use so an adapter makes sense
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Army surplus boots are inexpensive and well made and plenty are available if you don't mind wearing used.
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Vinyl paint spray could work? It's used for car interiors to change the color or touch up. Would it work on exterior trim?
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@ProjectFarm I find referring to your videos saves me $$ from not purchasing the wrong product. Selling temporary trim fixes is like selling medications that treat but not cure the problem. Spend more $$ constantly treating trim. Plastics have been around since the 50's and I'm sure they know chemicals that can truly repair the look of plastic finishes. Temporary fixes mostly used when a vehicle is being sold to con the buyer.
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These large saws made for professionals have to have good performance. Faster cutting and less vibration after a days work is important, anything less isn’t good 😮
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That’s why I use corded grinders and use an 8 inch for larger and fast work.
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I had an impact screwdriver, you whack them and it breaks loose seized screws. The screwdriver failed due to the internal tube being machined quite thin in one section for no reason (other than to have it fail). I see these impact driver adapters also have an area machined thinner than the rest, made to fail after a few uses. They sell them in multiple sets because they break. No shock absorber zone but "made to fail zone". If thinner steel is a shock absorber zone we'd see vehicle frames weakened at points, they are not though. Nothing but salesmanship to call a point of failure something engineered into the thing to make it better when it only makes it worse. These performance tests must save consumers who watch these videos $ millions with almost 1,500,000 subscribers. I'm sure many appreciate these videos.
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Great to know information. Buy the wrong glove and you have a whole box of somewhat useless gloves for your purposes.
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I used a torx to remove the rear hatch struts on my Camaro. Can you test replacement struts? The ones I got did not do the job for very long and none are cheap.
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A maintained cooling system works well. Additives are already present in good quality coolant. I ran pink GM coolant for years and it’s still clean without any contamination. Aluminum engines are much cleaner than the older cast iron engines
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If it’s a GM it’s worth it 😅
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Engineered to fail? Some tools are. I had a impact screwdriver that under the soft plastic sleeve the body of it was machined in to make it thinner than the rest of it and that’s where it failed. Do any of these tools shown here have obvious areas designed to fail?
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