Rust Hunting in Georgia
Rust Hunting in Georgia
Another horribly busy weekend, however I did manage to hit two sales.
The first netted some good woodworking and DIY books along with a Zyliss vise and hewing hatchet, also three Buck Brothers turning tools that are super heavy. First time I've ever seen that particular blacksmithing book in hardcover (fairly common in paperback).
The World's Largest Collection of 16000 Woodworking Plans!
I missed out on the box with accessories for $10 on the vise - saw the guy walking out with it and somehow didn't see it (must have been sitting somewhere else in the garage). I did score the main components for $15 even though the table-clamps are upside down...
This Falls City hewing hatchet (it's a single plane on the left side - I tried to get an image but it was too blurred) comes in handy when smoothing split logs - now if I can only find a broadaxe...)
These Buck Brothers turning tools are the larges/heaviest I've ever seen - happy to get the skew, scraper and gouge...
The last sale I went to netted me the brass fishing scale, the Stanley Handyman chisel, two brace bits (see photo at the top) and the blacksmith's tongs. I also scored a decent concrete hoe for $2 and a fiberglass handled Ames shovel for $3 (why is it that you always need shovels? They seem to walk away...).
The first netted some good woodworking and DIY books along with a Zyliss vise and hewing hatchet, also three Buck Brothers turning tools that are super heavy. First time I've ever seen that particular blacksmithing book in hardcover (fairly common in paperback).
The World's Largest Collection of 16000 Woodworking Plans!
I missed out on the box with accessories for $10 on the vise - saw the guy walking out with it and somehow didn't see it (must have been sitting somewhere else in the garage). I did score the main components for $15 even though the table-clamps are upside down...
This Falls City hewing hatchet (it's a single plane on the left side - I tried to get an image but it was too blurred) comes in handy when smoothing split logs - now if I can only find a broadaxe...)
These Buck Brothers turning tools are the larges/heaviest I've ever seen - happy to get the skew, scraper and gouge...
The last sale I went to netted me the brass fishing scale, the Stanley Handyman chisel, two brace bits (see photo at the top) and the blacksmith's tongs. I also scored a decent concrete hoe for $2 and a fiberglass handled Ames shovel for $3 (why is it that you always need shovels? They seem to walk away...).
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