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-   -   Harbor Freight Win-or-Fail Thread (https://www.miataturbo.net/insert-bs-here-4/harbor-freight-win-fail-thread-51348/)

Leafy Jun 28, 2013 09:05 AM

Where do you buy them?

18psi Jun 28, 2013 09:06 AM

I used to go apesh* with stupid gloves tearing every 2 seconds. Then got some thick ones similar to those and now my life is so much easier :)

They have similar ones at HF, that's where I get mine.

y8s Jun 28, 2013 09:06 AM


Originally Posted by Braineack (Post 1026232)
The only thing I didn't like about them is the weird black powder/coating on them that feels awful to the touch (like newsprint) and gets all over your hands.

black oxide for color and oil to prevent rust. they don't plate them in chrome because it chips off during impacts.

Braineack Jun 28, 2013 09:10 AM


Originally Posted by Leafy (Post 1026245)
Where do you buy them?

advance auto parts carries them; that's where I always buy them.

Buy SAS Survival Air Systems Thickster Latex Exam Grade Glove - Medium SAS6602 at Advance Auto Parts



do NOT buy the black Raven gloves they carry, probably the worse gloves I've ever used.

2ndGearRubber Jun 28, 2013 09:28 AM


Originally Posted by shuiend (Post 1026231)
I have had a set of HF deep metric impact sockets. I have actually broken a few. I believe the 17mm and 14mm cracked after a few years of use. I have just ran up to sears and gotten craftman replacements for the ones that have cracked. For the price point I would recommend them, but just know that you might eventually need to replace them

How'd you break them? I've pulled of axle nuts, steering assemblies, all sorts of bullshit, and they're fine after a year+ of daily use.

shuiend Jun 28, 2013 09:45 AM


Originally Posted by triple88a (Post 1026233)
For the price tag i'd say you'll get ur moneys worth vs how many break.

I agree that they are still a good deal. I think you might be able to get 3 deep impacts from sears for what it would cost for them all from HF. Just know that long term cracking may happen, and probably right when you need it.


Originally Posted by 2ndGearRubber (Post 1026254)
How'd you break them? I've pulled of axle nuts, steering assemblies, all sorts of bullshit, and they're fine after a year+ of daily use.

I think I broke my 17mm doing lugnuts or something. It was on my HF electric impact wrench. It was 3+ years of use though before I broke it. I think I also might have broke a 21mm loosening or tightening my crank bolt with engine out of the car.

m2cupcar Jun 28, 2013 02:21 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I've been using these nitrile dipped cloth gloves with success. I managed to get two 10 packs at tHD one day on an end cap for $10- half off. They're tough, thin, tight fitting and get some air to your hands, but not safe for dipping into bodily fluids like the thicksters.
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1372443681
Firm Grip Nitrile Coated Gloves (10-Pack)-5510-16 at The Home Depot

triple88a Jun 28, 2013 05:56 PM


Originally Posted by m2cupcar (Post 1026379)
I've been using these nitrile dipped cloth gloves with success. I managed to get two 10 packs at tHD one day on an end cap for $10- half off. They're tough, thin, tight fitting and get some air to your hands, but not safe for dipping into bodily fluids like the thicksters.
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1372443681
Firm Grip Nitrile Coated Gloves (10-Pack)-5510-16 at The Home Depot

U buy this shit from ace hardware and the gardening section of target/kmart for like 3 bucks.

ZX-Tex Jul 14, 2013 09:04 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Well I have not posted to my own thread for awhile so here is some more. First, some comments on recent posts:
- I agree, i am really tired of using those pansy nitrile gloves. They are good for very light work like painting but otherwise forget it. They tear too easily. The ones we have at work (Science/Engineering R&D lab where they HAVE to be tough or very expensive stuff gets damaged) are much tougher. Thanks for the link to the Advance Auto ones.
- I split open two HF impact sockets I was using for lug nuts. They had seen a lot of use since I had been using them at the track (with a cordless impact) to swap tire sets. No big deal, i tossed them and bought new ones. The set I just bought is the large set of deep-well ones posted above that goes up to 34mm or whatever it is. I wish it came with a storage box but otherwise they are working fine so far.

OK time for the new addition to the garage, which is a WIN
HF Media Blast Cabinet, Central Pneumatic - Item#42202
Abrasive Blast Cabinet
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1373807061

I bought this to blast (with aluminum oxide) a set of Sanderson LS1 headers in preparation for ceramic coating. It works well. I used the smallest diameter tip and the feed rate was good enough to get the job done. It does not come with a light, or an air hose, so get each of those. I bought a LED light that I glued to the inside top wall and that works well enough. Your regular shop hose can be run into the enclosure, but it is a lot more convenient to get a short section of air hose, say 5-10 feet, so you can leave it with the cabinet. Keep in mind these use a LOT of compressed air so if you have a small compressor you will spend some time waiting for it to recharge.

I connected my shop vac to the cabinet (see the instructions) to keep the media from making a mess outside of the cabinet and that works.

And, for those who do not know, using regular silica sand, like sand box sand, is a really bad idea from what I have read. If you breathe in the fine particles you will die a slow, horrible death, and give cancer to puppies and kittens. Using aluminum oxide, soda, or walnut shells (depending on what you are blasting) is a better idea. I used this stuff http://www.harborfreight.com/2-lbs-2...ive-66846.html when I was blasting the headers.

Jevans100 Jul 15, 2013 10:12 PM

1 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by shuiend (Post 626284)
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1373940767

Transmission Jack: Full of Win

I have used it on a dozen plus clutch jobs and it always makes life easier. Well worth the $40 I spent on it.

FAIL IMO and by IMO I mean it dropped a dodge d250 transmission on me last night, it did not slip off... trans jack broke and collapsed the strap is nice but the manual mechanism sucks donkey d then I borrowed the bigger hydraulic hf one and that did the trick no prob shell out the extra cash for the bigger one unless you are just doing a very small trans

Jevans100 Jul 15, 2013 10:24 PM


Originally Posted by ZX-Tex (Post 1031586)
Well I have not posted to my own thread for awhile so here is some more. First, some comments on recent posts:
- I agree, i am really tired of using those pansy nitrile gloves. They are good for very light work like painting but otherwise forget it. They tear too easily. The ones we have at work (Science/Engineering R&D lab where they HAVE to be tough or very expensive stuff gets damaged) are much tougher. Thanks for the link to the Advance Auto ones.
- I split open two HF impact sockets I was using for lug nuts. They had seen a lot of use since I had been using them at the track (with a cordless impact) to swap tire sets. No big deal, i tossed them and bought new ones. The set I just bought is the large set of deep-well ones posted above that goes up to 34mm or whatever it is. I wish it came with a storage box but otherwise they are working fine so far.

OK time for the new addition to the garage, which is a WIN
HF Media Blast Cabinet, Central Pneumatic - Item#42202
Abrasive Blast Cabinet
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1373807061

I bought this to blast (with aluminum oxide) a set of Sanderson LS1 headers in preparation for ceramic coating. It works well. I used the smallest diameter tip and the feed rate was good enough to get the job done. It does not come with a light, or an air hose, so get each of those. I bought a LED light that I glued to the inside top wall and that works well enough. Your regular shop hose can be run into the enclosure, but it is a lot more convenient to get a short section of air hose, say 5-10 feet, so you can leave it with the cabinet. Keep in mind these use a LOT of compressed air so if you have a small compressor you will spend some time waiting for it to recharge.

I connected my shop vac to the cabinet (see the instructions) to keep the media from making a mess outside of the cabinet and that works.

And, for those who do not know, using regular silica sand, like sand box sand, is a really bad idea from what I have read. If you breathe in the fine particles you will die a slow, horrible death, and give cancer to puppies and kittens. Using aluminum oxide, soda, or walnut shells (depending on what you are blasting) is a better idea. I used this stuff 2 Lbs. 220 Grit White Aluminum Oxide Abrasive when I was blasting the headers.

definitely full of win I want to add something to that, it may not be harbor freight but northern tools has a sand called black diamond that is cheap and great for heavy rust, paint, and grime removal I think it's around 10 bucks per 50lb bag might be a 20lb haven't bought it in a while

dieselmiata Jul 15, 2013 11:13 PM

Black Diamond is a good, but very abrasive media. It's nothing but coal slag, and has very sharp edges. It will tear through rust and paint, but it will also tear into aluminum so be careful what parts you use it on.

I have the same blast cabinet for smaller jobs, and it works well (it's really just a box with holes cut in it) but I would highly recommend using a silicone caulking on EVERY seam and edge to prevent dust from escaping and coating your garage/car/cat.

If you shop around here Sandblast Cabinet Parts & Supplies - TP Tools & Equipment

you can upgrade your cabinet parts for a fraction of what a full assembled cabinet would cost. The gun they have is about 100 times better than the harbor freight one.

Braineack Jul 16, 2013 07:26 AM


Originally Posted by Jevans100 (Post 1032189)
FAIL IMO and by IMO I mean it dropped a dodge d250 transmission on me last night, it did not slip off... trans jack broke and collapsed the strap is nice but the manual mechanism sucks donkey d then I borrowed the bigger hydraulic hf one and that did the trick no prob shell out the extra cash for the bigger one unless you are just doing a very small trans

pics or it didnt happen.

m2cupcar Jul 16, 2013 10:06 AM


Originally Posted by triple88a (Post 1026462)
U buy this shit from ace hardware and the gardening section of target/kmart for like 3 bucks.

$3 for a ten pack? Standard tHD price breaks out to $1/pair.

triple88a Jul 16, 2013 06:09 PM


Originally Posted by m2cupcar (Post 1032349)
$3 for a ten pack? Standard tHD price breaks out to $1/pair.

Hh nvm didnt know u were saying for a 10 pack, got confused with the "each" listed on the add.

JasonC SBB Jul 21, 2013 12:19 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Awesome ceramic kitchen knives.

https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1374423560

3 different sizes. Here's the medium sized one:

5" Ceramic Utility Knife

Supe Jul 21, 2013 03:24 PM

^^^ Do those hold up after a while? Have been tempted on more than one occasion, they go on sale constantly.

DaveC Jul 21, 2013 07:31 PM

Do they trigger metal detectors? :D

2manyhobyz Jul 21, 2013 10:28 PM

They will hold an edge a little longer than steel, but the problem is once the ceramic gets dull you will need access to diamond sharpening equipment and even then it's very very difficult. Also extremely brittle, don't drop'em. Think of kitchen knives as a tool you use almost every day. You want Snap-on quality so to speak. Stick with a high quality name brand forged steel. Learn how to put an edge on it yourself. (like 15-20*) Choose a diamond steel instead of a butcher's steel to keep the edge up. Just my .02
Cheers,
-JB

Supe Jul 22, 2013 07:52 PM


Originally Posted by 2manyhobyz (Post 1034951)
They will hold an edge a little longer than steel, but the problem is once the ceramic gets dull you will need access to diamond sharpening equipment and even then it's very very difficult. Also extremely brittle, don't drop'em. Think of kitchen knives as a tool you use almost every day. You want Snap-on quality so to speak. Stick with a high quality name brand forged steel. Learn how to put an edge on it yourself. (like 15-20*) Choose a diamond steel instead of a butcher's steel to keep the edge up. Just my .02
Cheers,
-JB

I've got a few Henkel knives that I use/sharpen regularly myself, but am always on the lookout for some beater knives to use in the kitchen.


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