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There are likely a lot better scanners out there than this one www.amazon.com/Performance-Tool-W2977-Scanner-Diagnostics/dp/B00MXFFRN0?th=1 but it has worked for me to check and clear codes on a variety of different vehicles, including Lexus, Honda and Pontiac.
When it comes to cordless, I'm totally into Milwaukee as well. I used to have so many different brands of battery and corded tools and now it's just Milwaukee and they haven't let me down. As for Ryobi, they and Milwaukee are owned by the same company; Techtronic Industries Company Limited...
This stuff (CRC Brakleen ) is almost pure perchloroethylene, I always have a gallon of it on hand. Works great in those pump up sprayers too. However I use it cold, heating it up would release even more vapors.
That is why I like to have flashlights that are variable brightness; I usually click the button a couple of times to dim the light when working up close.
I love my Milwaukee tools, I have a load of them. But when I looked for a sander and polisher for bodywork I decided on a plug in Bosch instead. I just didn't need the cordless feature when my sanding is right beside power outlets and I knew I'd be sanding for long enough to have to change the...
This is on their web site:
Our mission guides us to manufacture the best professional quality tools & organizers while offering them at an affordable price with no middleman. Our tools are made in Taiwan, Germany, and the USA; this information is visible in the specifications section of each...
I was skeptical but tried a cheap ebay machine. I've actually been pretty happy with it, it cuts quick and smooth. I've used it mainly for sheetmetal and bodywork, haven't used it for cuts over 1/4" thick...
Back around 1980 after seeing a magazine ad for a flanging tool I made my own by brazing squares of 18 gauge steel to the top and bottom jaws of a flat jaw vice grip. It has the right offset and worked great. I still found use for it a couple of years ago.
Your last sentence, sadly, hits home. I often look at tools and such, but then I think it would have been great to have them twenty or forty years ago but now...probably won't get that much more use out of them.