And Lowes or Craftsman themselvesI THINK Ace Hardware honors broken Craftsman replacement free of charge, but not sure.
What blows my mind is realizing that in 1979, when I was 16, I daily drove an 11 year old car, 1968 Ford Fairlane 500. Today at 62, my daily is a 29 year old car.It blows my mind to think that back then, these cars that we now call "Classics" were just a few years old. Yours was just 10.
I bought this 69 Dart in late 1982:
View attachment 1716505317
It was a 13 year old car. It would be like buying a 2013 year model car right now.
Does anyone think any car from 2013 is destined to be sought after 40 years from now?
Maybe a Challenger or Charger....

Got a picture of the thumb wheel ratchet.What blows my mind is realizing that in 1979, when I was 16, I daily drove an 11 year old car, 1968 Ford Fairlane 500. Today at 62, my daily is a 29 year old car.
On the topic of this thread, one of my best cheap tool buys was a 1/4 drive thumbwheel ratchet, bought for $5 about 20 years ago, thing works great still and saves a lot of fiddling around, sorry, no pictures at the moment.
Bought a set of those, probably craftsman, 1/2-3/8-1/4. Come in handy...rarely.
Funny I was watching Jay Leno not so long ago. He was working in a car that was 100 years old. He said no car built in modern times would ever last to 100 years old. The electronic will never make it. Anything built today with computers 40 years from now nobody will have the means to repair or replace the electronics.It blows my mind to think that back then, these cars that we now call "Classics" were just a few years old. Yours was just 10.
I bought this 69 Dart in late 1982:
View attachment 1716505317
It was a 13 year old car. It would be like buying a 2013 year model car right now.
Does anyone think any car from 2013 is destined to be sought after 40 years from now?
Maybe a Challenger or Charger....
Is it Petty Blue..?I got my 73 340 Rally Charger in 81. 79K miles on it.
Looks like a hydaulic jack to me. Used many like it over the years.Actually the oldest tool I have is a Walker floor jack.
Hand me down from my grand father. Non hydraulic.
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And that's the Plan!Funny I was watching Jay Leno not so long ago. He was working in a car that was 100 years old. He said no car built in modern times would ever last to 100 years old. The electronic will never make it. Anything built today with computers 40 years from now nobody will have the means to repair or replace the electronics.
Bought a 700-some piece set from Sears in 1972 or 73. Cost was way less than others. Seems like it was in the $700 range, too. Probably still have receipt somewhere. Then I could afford to buy anything I still needed from expensive tool companies, as I needed them, & usually w/o needing to make payments. Saved a lot more that way. & Sears replaced broken tools for free, too.Sears used to have pretty darn good tools too! Among other things, I bought a lot of their work clothes. I also still have some of their old tools. Back when they sold items MADE IN U.S.A.
I still have my left-handed lug wrench, that I use often.Actually the oldest tool I have is a Walker floor jack.
Hand me down from my grand father. Non hydraulic.
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Nice! I used to be a whiz at sharpening drill bits by eye, 40 some years ago. These days my eyes can't even imagine seeing that fine point. Hell, I can't even read the size stamped into the bits.I got an old drill grinder from work, for free when they shut down the machine shop
like this a darex (just looked it up, wow...$$$)
View attachment 1716507434
so I buy all the drill bits at yard sales
you can tell the good old steel bits right away, and I toss the junk
it will do up to a 1 - 1/2" bit and down to 1/8 (with a magnifier...lol)
I've always sharpened drill bits freehand. Constantly sharpening in batches, as we were always riveting something & needed to. Also bits up to the 1-1/2 to 2" range for the machine shop, using a 2 foot diameter disc sander, some multiple angles. Have a sharpening machine I inherited & kept & used little. Might need it now, since I don't see as well.I got an old drill grinder from work, for free when they shut down the machine shop
like this a darex (just looked it up, wow...$$$)
View attachment 1716507434
so I buy all the drill bits at yard sales
you can tell the good old steel bits right away, and I toss the junk
it will do up to a 1 - 1/2" bit and down to 1/8 (with a magnifier...lol)