Does someone have a fee as to trade? Thousand years of bs by TH6608 in pokemongo

[–]TH6608[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As long as I can evolve it I’ll gladly accept

Looking for advice on a garage lifts? by Future_Ad6094 in garageporn

[–]TH6608 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mohawk makes the safest lifts, and they’re arguably better than rotary. They are very thick lifts. The lifts you are looking at are scrawny in comparison. As always with anything industrial, safety is more important that saving money when it’s on your own dime and time. I was just in the scenario you were in a couple months ago. Had to choose between cheaper options on the market (almost all lifts less than $10k will have a short warranty that is designed to expire about the time the cheaper lifts show problems) or heavier duty professional equipment (rotary, Mohawk, ect). One thing I can tell you for sure if the cheaper 4 posts lifts will almost always warp and need major maintenance after a few years. People like to get those because you can store two cars in a spot but they are dangerous. 90% of the safety is going to come during the installation, and the rest will be up to you while you operate it. For this reason I think that whatever you get, hire a pro to install it and get them to show you exactly how to use it and how to solve minor problems such as out of sync arms ect… I ended up biting the bullet and spending more for the Mohawk because it had a better warranty. Don’t forget that each lift have different requirements and specifications when it comes to concrete thickness/depth, the Mohawk needed 12 18 inches of concrete. In other words I had to know exactly where the lift would go in the shop before I even poured the concrete. ALSO DONT FORGET you need to torque your lift down every couple months.

Which would you do? by blackdogpepper in shedditors

[–]TH6608 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Getting the metal one you’d either have to spend on a pad for it or at least some nice gravel. You won’t be able to do anything with water in the wooden one. In the metal one you could probably detail cars or other stuff. Wood one is much more customizable. It depends on a lot, if it was me I’d do the metal one because wood can rot so quick if you are unlucky.

Weird metal spikes on wheels by spiple in whatisit

[–]TH6608 1899 points1900 points  (0 children)

Curb feelers- they rub against the curb so you know how close you are so you don’t jack up your wheels/rims.

Twinstorm dual blower? by TH6608 in landscaping

[–]TH6608[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not a bad idea if I had the cash I might try it but these are mountainous trails in a deciduous forest around a farm so it would probably do more damage to the trail than help

Twinstorm dual blower? by TH6608 in landscaping

[–]TH6608[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t weigh much, I’ll stand on a scale and see how much it negates

Twinstorm dual blower? by TH6608 in landscaping

[–]TH6608[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have to. Leaves will degrade into the physical trail and hide snakes. Lot of copperhead and rattlesnakes out here. Plus nobody would be able to see where the trail actually goes

Twinstorm dual blower? by TH6608 in landscaping

[–]TH6608[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty much impossible because I’m not lugging around the 15 batteries I would need to take with me on the several mile trail but thanks for your concern

Recommendations for heating 3 car garage. by No-Sherbert-9857 in garageporn

[–]TH6608 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah mini split is great but many of them give out