Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
caulk tubes.
This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
worth it.
https://www.tubeanew.com
I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
reasons.
1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
job.
3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
no-brainer for me.
Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
use one.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>
>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>
>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>
>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>> another tube.
>>>
>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>> I use one.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>> good.
>
> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
> more as a butt-saver.
>
> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
> seat, yea! Nope, crap again!  It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!!  :-)
>
> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>
>
There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
situation. LOL
Now where is that utility knife???
On 3/28/2018 8:44 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:23:34 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
> wrote:
>
>> On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>> Snip
>>
>>
>>>
>>> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
>>> am in my house or at work.
>>>
>>
>> I typically have 5~6 pencils in the shop. They are typically in one
>> spot or no where to be found. :~)
>>
>> My lumber supplier gives me a new pencil or two when I buy wood. These
>> are good pencils and are closely guarded in my desk drawer. I think I
>> have about 50 stashed away. I give the pink ones to my wife. ;~)
>
> I've bought packs of 50 .7mm mechanical pencils at WallyWorld for
> about $5.
>
I still prefer something with a point, relatively sharp one. Might be
from my old drafting days. I do not do a lot of marking so a good
pencil will last me a long time. It has probably been a couple of years
since I have taken one of those pencils out of my desk. It's not unusual
for me to not make a single mark during a full day of cutting wood.
On Tuesday, March 27, 2018 at 2:57:47 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> > On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
> >> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> >>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
> >>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
> >>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
> >>>
> >>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
> >>> several reasons. 1.=C2=A0 I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
> >>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
> >>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
> >>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
> >>> for each job. 3.=C2=A0 Most importantly: whether in the shop or on th=
e
> >>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
> >>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
> >>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
> >>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4.=C2=A0 I've used every singl=
e
> >>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
> >>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
> >>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
> >>>
> >>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
> >>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
> >>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
> >>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
> >>>
> >>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
> >>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
> >>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
> >>> another tube.
> >>>
> >>> Can't wait to get these.=C2=A0 I'll report back with a review as soon=
as
> >>> I use one.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
> >> than half of a tube.=C2=A0 But for the expensive stuff this should be
> >> good.
> >=20
> > It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
> > more as a butt-saver.
> >=20
> > There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
> > calking that was previously unplanned for.=C2=A0 Crap!=C2=A0 Now I have=
to run to
> > the hardware store for caulk, no wait!=C2=A0 I have half a tube under m=
y
> > seat, yea!=C2=A0 Nope, crap again!=C2=A0=C2=A0 It's all dried up in the=
nozzle or the
> > nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end.=C2=A0 Wait, I have Tube-A-New!=
!=C2=A0=C2=A0 :-)
> >=20
> > Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
> >=20
> >=20
> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"=20
> situation. LOL
>=20
> Now where is that utility knife???
Speaking of dried up caulk and utility knives...
A bunch of years back I came across a full tube of caulk that was dried
up solid, end to end. Just for fun I grabbed a utility knife and cut the=20
tube enough to be able to peel it away, leaving me holding a hard, rubbery=
=20
cylinder of caulk.=20
First off, the caulk would have made a perfect "blunt instrument" that=20
would have really confused the local Medical Examiner. Slightly rubbery,=20
but hard enough to break a bone or crack a skull.
But that wasn't the most interesting thing. After playing around with it, I
noticed that my hands smelled a little funny, although I hadn't noticed tha=
t
caulk itself had any odor at all. I brought it up real close to my nose and
took a whiff. The odor was so sharp that I recoiled almost in pain. I moved
the caulk just a few inches from my nose and smelled nothing. I brought it=
=20
closer and recoiled again.
There were a few guys around, so I told them to smell it. The same thing
happened to them. A few inches from the nose, nothing. Right up at the nose=
,
pain.
It was the strangest thing. The odor just clung to the caulk and didn't
radiate.
On Wednesday, March 28, 2018 at 9:48:38 PM UTC-4, [email protected] wrote:
> On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:26:40 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
> wrote:
>=20
> >On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> >> On Tuesday, March 27, 2018 at 2:57:47 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
> >>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> >>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
> >>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> >>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
> >>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
> >>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
> >>>>>> several reasons. 1.=C2=A0 I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
> >>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
> >>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
> >>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
> >>>>>> for each job. 3.=C2=A0 Most importantly: whether in the shop or on=
the
> >>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
> >>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
> >>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is al=
l
> >>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4.=C2=A0 I've used every si=
ngle
> >>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
> >>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
> >>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
> >>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
> >>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
> >>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
> >>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
> >>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
> >>>>>> another tube.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Can't wait to get these.=C2=A0 I'll report back with a review as s=
oon as
> >>>>>> I use one.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
> >>>>> than half of a tube.=C2=A0 But for the expensive stuff this should =
be
> >>>>> good.
> >>>>
> >>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
> >>>> more as a butt-saver.
> >>>>
> >>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for so=
me
> >>>> calking that was previously unplanned for.=C2=A0 Crap!=C2=A0 Now I h=
ave to run to
> >>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait!=C2=A0 I have half a tube unde=
r my
> >>>> seat, yea!=C2=A0 Nope, crap again!=C2=A0=C2=A0 It's all dried up in =
the nozzle or the
> >>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end.=C2=A0 Wait, I have Tube-A-N=
ew!!=C2=A0=C2=A0 :-)
> >>>>
> >>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
> >>> situation. LOL
> >>>
> >>> Now where is that utility knife???
> >>=20
> >> Speaking of dried up caulk and utility knives...
> >>=20
> >> A bunch of years back I came across a full tube of caulk that was drie=
d
> >> up solid, end to end. Just for fun I grabbed a utility knife and cut t=
he
> >> tube enough to be able to peel it away, leaving me holding a hard, rub=
bery
> >> cylinder of caulk.
> >>=20
> >> First off, the caulk would have made a perfect "blunt instrument" that
> >> would have really confused the local Medical Examiner. Slightly rubber=
y,
> >> but hard enough to break a bone or crack a skull.
> >
> >Whew! I thought you may have been going another direction with that. ;=
~)
>=20
> Where do I send the bill for a new keyboard?
Mind, meet gutter.
On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 19:52:50 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On Wednesday, March 28, 2018 at 9:48:38 PM UTC-4, [email protected] wrote:
>> On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:26:40 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
>> wrote:
>>
>> >On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
>> >> On Tuesday, March 27, 2018 at 2:57:47 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
>> >>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> >>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>> >>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> >>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>> >>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>> >>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>> >>>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>> >>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>> >>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>> >>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>> >>>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>> >>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>> >>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>> >>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>> >>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>> >>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>> >>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>> >>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>> >>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>> >>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>> >>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>> >>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>> >>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>> >>>>>> another tube.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>> >>>>>> I use one.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>> >>>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>> >>>>> good.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>> >>>> more as a butt-saver.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>> >>>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>> >>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>> >>>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again! It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>> >>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!! :-)
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
>> >>> situation. LOL
>> >>>
>> >>> Now where is that utility knife???
>> >>
>> >> Speaking of dried up caulk and utility knives...
>> >>
>> >> A bunch of years back I came across a full tube of caulk that was dried
>> >> up solid, end to end. Just for fun I grabbed a utility knife and cut the
>> >> tube enough to be able to peel it away, leaving me holding a hard, rubbery
>> >> cylinder of caulk.
>> >>
>> >> First off, the caulk would have made a perfect "blunt instrument" that
>> >> would have really confused the local Medical Examiner. Slightly rubbery,
>> >> but hard enough to break a bone or crack a skull.
>> >
>> >Whew! I thought you may have been going another direction with that. ;~)
>>
>> Where do I send the bill for a new keyboard?
>
>Mind, meet gutter.
Yep! Been there before and it'll find its way back again.
On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:23:34 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
wrote:
>On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>Snip
>
>
>>
>> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
>> am in my house or at work.
>>
>
>I typically have 5~6 pencils in the shop. They are typically in one
>spot or no where to be found. :~)
>
>My lumber supplier gives me a new pencil or two when I buy wood. These
>are good pencils and are closely guarded in my desk drawer. I think I
>have about 50 stashed away. I give the pink ones to my wife. ;~)
I've bought packs of 50 .7mm mechanical pencils at WallyWorld for
about $5.
On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
> caulk tubes.
> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
> worth it.
> https://www.tubeanew.com
>
> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
> reasons.
> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
> job.
> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>
> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>
> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
> no-brainer for me.
> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>
> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
> use one.
>
>
Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less than
half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be good.
On 3/27/2018 2:57 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> On 3/27/18 2:37 PM, dpb wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is
>>>>> cheap enough to make reusing caulk worth it.
>>>>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>> ...
>>
>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving
>>>> less than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this
>>>> should be good.
>>>
>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see
>>> it more as a butt-saver.
>>>
>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for
>>> some calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have
>>> to run to the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a
>>> tube under my seat, yea! Nope, crap again!  It's all dried up in
>>> the nozzle or the nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I
>>> have Tube-A-New!!  :-)
>>>
>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>
>> I'd've thunk for somebody working pretty-much continuously would use
>> up tubes fast enough to not be such a problem as for the
>> homeowner/handyman who may be months between (like I, for the most
>> part as far as that kind of work)...
>>
>> That said, certainly for the "high-priced spread" could well be worth
>> Â the material savings and obviously if it's a livelihood rather than
>> Â hobby or just personal then "time is money" will likely override
>> other considerations.
>>
>> That said also :) I've had moderately good success with using
>> appropriately-sized wirenut to cap a tube and then place in sealable
>> Â plastic baggie; can squeeze enough air out of them it seems to
>> significantly slow the cure rate on those that are
>> oxidation-driven...plus, keeps any mess contained if in the truck or
>> the like and something gets dropped on the tube and smushes it
>> instead of getting all over...
>>
>> I may order the sample just to see, though; is cute idea...
>>
>>
>> --
>
> Certainly, it's not an issue for someone who, like you said, is using
> the same product every day for the same tasks. Window installers, for
> example.
>
> But it's perfect for me. I like to have "some of everything" in the
> van. I usually keep a few varieties and colors of this type of tubes in
> the van...
> <https://www.lowes.com/pd/GE-Silicone-II-2-8-oz-Clear-Silicone-Caulk/3102449>
>
> They are big enough for smaller jobs and touch-ups, but big enough to
> save for later use. Plus, the screw-on/off cap works very well.
>
> The Tube-A-New should allow me to use left-over full size tubes for this
> purpose as well.
>
>
Thinking a little more about this, can you reuse them? Seems that they
renew a tube that is dried up on the end but it will dry up again if you
do not use the remainder of the tube.
On 3/28/2018 10:47 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> On 3/28/18 10:06 PM, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/28/2018 8:44 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>>> On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:23:34 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>>>> Snip
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
>>>>> am in my house or at work.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I typically have 5~6 pencils in the shop. They are typically in one
>>>> spot or no where to be found. :~)
>>>>
>>>> My lumber supplier gives me a new pencil or two when I buy wood. These
>>>> are good pencils and are closely guarded in my desk drawer. I think I
>>>> have about 50 stashed away. I give the pink ones to my wife. ;~)
>>>
>>> I've bought packs of 50 .7mm mechanical pencils at WallyWorld for
>>> about $5.
>>>
>>
>> I still prefer something with a point, relatively sharp one. Might be
>> from my old drafting days. I do not do a lot of marking so a good
>> pencil will last me a long time. It has probably been a couple of
>> years since I have taken one of those pencils out of my desk. It's not
>> unusual for me to not make a single mark during a full day of cutting
>> wood.
>
> I have my "old drafting days," too!
>
> I rue the day when I left my drafting tools somewhere, including all the
> pencils and leads.
> To this day, I prefer a really hard lead like a 2H or higher... if I can
> find it.
>
>
My old t-Square is hanging on the wall about 4' from me right now.
Behind me, on a book shelf, my old electric eraser. My old stationary
heavy spin around mechanical pencil sharpener is around here some where.
I think I still have my triangles. AH! my old bow compass set is in the
shop. Then in 86 I started drawing with CAD, self taught. It was a
hobby then for wood working.
On 3/27/2018 2:11 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> On 3/27/18 1:57 PM, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>>
>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>>>> another tube.
>>>>>
>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>>>> I use one.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>>>> good.
>>>
>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>>> more as a butt-saver.
>>>
>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again!  It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!!
>>> :-)
>>>
>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>>
>>>
>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
>> situation. LOL
>>
>> Now where is that utility knife???
>
> Utility knives and in the same category as tape measures in my book.
> There needs to one within reach at any and every location I keep or use
> tools.
> Every bench, vehicle, tool box, everywhere.  :-)
>
>
Soooo I have at least 5 utility knives..... I could only find the one
with the dull blade with no spares for it... When I finish the task I
located the other 4, all where they were supposed to be. I was just not
looking for what I though I was looking for.
-MIKE- <[email protected]> wrote in news:[email protected]:
> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
> caulk tubes.
> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
> worth it.
> https://www.tubeanew.com
>
> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
> reasons.[...]
Mike, thanks much for posting this. I've already ordered the $1 sample, and I expect I'll order a
5-pack within a day or two after that arrives. Finally, something that might actually *work* for
saving caulk!
On 3/27/2018 1:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
> caulk tubes.
> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
> worth it.
> https://www.tubeanew.com
>
> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
> reasons.
> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
> job.
> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>
> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>
> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
> no-brainer for me.
> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>
> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
> use one.
>
>
Seems kind of excessive but I guess YMMV. Personally, I've been using these:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000H5S8X4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
for a while and they are foolproof. I had a tube of construction adhesive
that I capped back in early 2014 with one of these and opened it a week ago
and it was still perfectly usable. My biggest problem was that I had bought
a big contractor-size package of them and it appears that during a
post-project cleanup they got sent to the landfill so I had to buy
replacements (in a smaller package this time).
On Tuesday, March 27, 2018 at 5:53:59 PM UTC-4, -MIKE- wrote:
> On 3/27/18 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> > On Tue, 27 Mar 2018 14:11:15 -0500, -MIKE- <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> >=20
> >> On 3/27/18 1:57 PM, Leon wrote:
> >>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> >>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
> >>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> >>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
> >>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
> >>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
> >>>>>> several reasons. 1.=C2=A0 I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
> >>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
> >>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
> >>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
> >>>>>> for each job. 3.=C2=A0 Most importantly: whether in the shop or on=
the
> >>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
> >>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
> >>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is al=
l
> >>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4.=C2=A0 I've used every si=
ngle
> >>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
> >>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
> >>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
> >>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
> >>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
> >>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
> >>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
> >>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
> >>>>>> another tube.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Can't wait to get these.=C2=A0 I'll report back with a review as s=
oon as
> >>>>>> I use one.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
> >>>>> than half of a tube.=C2=A0 But for the expensive stuff this should =
be
> >>>>> good.
> >>>>
> >>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
> >>>> more as a butt-saver.
> >>>>
> >>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for so=
me
> >>>> calking that was previously unplanned for.=C2=A0 Crap!=C2=A0 Now I h=
ave to run to
> >>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait!=C2=A0 I have half a tube unde=
r my
> >>>> seat, yea!=C2=A0 Nope, crap again!=C2=A0=C2=A0 It's all dried up in =
the nozzle or the
> >>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end.=C2=A0 Wait, I have Tube-A-N=
ew!!=C2=A0=C2=A0 :-)
> >>>>
> >>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
> >>> situation.=C2=A0 LOL
> >>>
> >>> Now where is that utility knife???
> >>
> >> Utility knives and in the same category as tape measures in my book.
> >> There needs to one within reach at any and every location I keep or us=
e
> >> tools.
> >> Every bench, vehicle, tool box, everywhere. :-)
> >=20
> > +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
> > am in my house or at work.
> >=20
>=20
> YES, pencils, too.
> (and reading glasses)
>=20
>=20
For me, it's a step ladder, stool or chair. ;-)
On Tue, 27 Mar 2018 14:58:27 -0400, Keith Nuttle
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On 3/27/2018 2:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>>> caulk tubes.
>>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>>> worth it.
>>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>
>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
>>> reasons.
>>> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
>>> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
>>> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
>>> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
>>> job.
>>> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
>>> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
>>> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
>>> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
>>> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
>>> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
>>> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>
>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
>>> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
>>> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
>>> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>
>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
>>> no-brainer for me.
>>> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
>>> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>>>
>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
>>> use one.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less than
>> half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be good.
>May not work as well but I have found that One of the large size Wire
>nut works well as a cap for used caulk tube.
A screw threaded into the nozzle works well.
>
>Maybe not as well as that advertised but better that any thing I have found
On Tue, 27 Mar 2018 14:11:15 -0500, -MIKE- <[email protected]>
wrote:
>On 3/27/18 1:57 PM, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>>
>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>>>> another tube.
>>>>>
>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>>>> I use one.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>>>> good.
>>>
>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>>> more as a butt-saver.
>>>
>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again! It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!! :-)
>>>
>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>>
>>>
>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
>> situation. LOL
>>
>> Now where is that utility knife???
>
>Utility knives and in the same category as tape measures in my book.
>There needs to one within reach at any and every location I keep or use
>tools.
>Every bench, vehicle, tool box, everywhere. :-)
+1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
am in my house or at work.
On 3/27/2018 2:17 PM, John McGaw wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 1:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>> caulk tubes.
>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>> worth it.
>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>
>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
>> reasons.
>> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
>> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
>> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
>> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
>> job.
>> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
>> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
>> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
>> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
>> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
>> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
>> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>
>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
>> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
>> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
>> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>
>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
>> no-brainer for me.
>> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
>> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>>
>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
>> use one.
>>
>>
> Seems kind of excessive but I guess YMMV. Personally, I've been using
> these:
>
> https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000H5S8X4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
>
>
> for a while and they are foolproof. I had a tube of construction
> adhesive that I capped back in early 2014 with one of these and opened
> it a week ago and it was still perfectly usable. My biggest problem was
> that I had bought a big contractor-size package of them and it appears
> that during a post-project cleanup they got sent to the landfill so I
> had to buy replacements (in a smaller package this time).
LOL, I have used those and they work well until they get a little too
old, 6~8 years., The rubber dries out, cracks, and hardens. Worked
pretty good on air tool male couplings too, until they dried out,
cracked, and hardened. A wire brush is necessary to remove at that
point. ;~(
On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 11:13:04 -0500, -MIKE- <[email protected]>
wrote:
>The only thing that keeps you from reusing a tube of caulk is usually
>that the nozzle is all clogged up and dry, and often even some inside
>the tube. As we all know, it's very difficult to pull dried caulk out
>of a tapered nozzle from the small end. And when you do, you usually
>end up buggering up the nozzle, and you need to put on an aftermarket
>nozzle or fashion some other "shop-tip" solution.
I have dental picks so when I am anal about it I can preserve the tip,
but maybe not that anal most of the time though.
On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 22:06:20 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
wrote:
>On 3/28/2018 8:44 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>> On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:23:34 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>>> Snip
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
>>>> am in my house or at work.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I typically have 5~6 pencils in the shop. They are typically in one
>>> spot or no where to be found. :~)
>>>
>>> My lumber supplier gives me a new pencil or two when I buy wood. These
>>> are good pencils and are closely guarded in my desk drawer. I think I
>>> have about 50 stashed away. I give the pink ones to my wife. ;~)
>>
>> I've bought packs of 50 .7mm mechanical pencils at WallyWorld for
>> about $5.
>>
>
>I still prefer something with a point, relatively sharp one. Might be
>from my old drafting days. I do not do a lot of marking so a good
>pencil will last me a long time. It has probably been a couple of years
>since I have taken one of those pencils out of my desk. It's not unusual
>for me to not make a single mark during a full day of cutting wood.
I use those around the house and shop. For drawing on real paper I
use .3mm or .5mm, depending).
On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:19:33 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
wrote:
>On 3/27/2018 2:11 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> On 3/27/18 1:57 PM, Leon wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>>>>> another tube.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>>>>> I use one.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>>>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>>>>> good.
>>>>
>>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>>>> more as a butt-saver.
>>>>
>>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>>>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>>>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again! It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!!
>>>> :-)
>>>>
>>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
>>> situation. LOL
>>>
>>> Now where is that utility knife???
>>
>> Utility knives and in the same category as tape measures in my book.
>> There needs to one within reach at any and every location I keep or use
>> tools.
>> Every bench, vehicle, tool box, everywhere. :-)
>>
>>
>
>
>Soooo I have at least 5 utility knives..... I could only find the one
>with the dull blade with no spares for it... When I finish the task I
>located the other 4, all where they were supposed to be. I was just not
>looking for what I though I was looking for.
I have a bunch of them, all lined up in a drawer. When I'm working on
a project, they slowly start walking out of the drawer and sit around
various benches (and horizontal surface, really) watching me work.
When I'm all done, I round them up and put them back to bed. There
are a couple of 100-packs of blades in the drawer, too.
On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:26:40 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
wrote:
>On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
>> On Tuesday, March 27, 2018 at 2:57:47 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>>>>> another tube.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>>>>> I use one.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>>>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>>>>> good.
>>>>
>>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>>>> more as a butt-saver.
>>>>
>>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>>>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>>>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again! It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!! :-)
>>>>
>>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
>>> situation. LOL
>>>
>>> Now where is that utility knife???
>>
>> Speaking of dried up caulk and utility knives...
>>
>> A bunch of years back I came across a full tube of caulk that was dried
>> up solid, end to end. Just for fun I grabbed a utility knife and cut the
>> tube enough to be able to peel it away, leaving me holding a hard, rubbery
>> cylinder of caulk.
>>
>> First off, the caulk would have made a perfect "blunt instrument" that
>> would have really confused the local Medical Examiner. Slightly rubbery,
>> but hard enough to break a bone or crack a skull.
>
>Whew! I thought you may have been going another direction with that. ;~)
Where do I send the bill for a new keyboard?
On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>
>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>
>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>
>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>> another tube.
>>
>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>> I use one.
>>
>>
>
> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
> good.
It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
more as a butt-saver.
There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
seat, yea! Nope, crap again! It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!! :-)
Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/2018 2:15 PM, Leon wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>> caulk tubes.
>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>> worth it.
>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>
>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
>> reasons.
>> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
>> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
>> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
>> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
>> job.
>> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
>> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
>> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
>> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
>> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
>> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
>> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>
>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
>> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
>> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
>> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>
>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
>> no-brainer for me.
>> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
>> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>>
>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
>> use one.
>>
>>
>
> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less than
> half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be good.
May not work as well but I have found that One of the large size Wire
nut works well as a cap for used caulk tube.
Maybe not as well as that advertised but better that any thing I have found
--
2018: The year we learn to play the great game of Euchre
On 3/27/18 1:57 PM, Leon wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>
>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>
>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>
>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>>> another tube.
>>>>
>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>>> I use one.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>>> good.
>>
>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>> more as a butt-saver.
>>
>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again!  It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!!  :-)
>>
>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>
>>
> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
> situation. LOL
>
> Now where is that utility knife???
Utility knives and in the same category as tape measures in my book.
There needs to one within reach at any and every location I keep or use
tools.
Every bench, vehicle, tool box, everywhere. :-)
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/18 1:58 PM, Keith Nuttle wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 2:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>
>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new
>>> one for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on
>>> the job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is
>>> all dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every
>>> single "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them
>>> work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all of
>>> them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>
>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but
>>> some of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone
>>> products are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>
>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>> another tube.
>>>
>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon
>>> as I use one.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>> good.
> May not work as well but I have found that One of the large size
> Wire nut works well as a cap for used caulk tube.
>
>
> Maybe not as well as that advertised but better that any thing I have
> found
>
I have used that trick before, too!
Even with the specialty made aftermarket caps with the long protruding
sticks in the middle, or the caulk-condom types, it seems like once you
break the original seal and any air gets in, the stuff in the nozzle
will dry up and harden.
Believe it or not, the little snap-on/off cap that comes on the GE tubes
does a pretty good job of keeping the tube usable for a week or longer.
But it pops off pretty easily, and it doesn't solve the problem of
needing a smaller opening on the tip.
This is one of the best replacement tips I've ever used and solves the
problem of re-sizing the nozzle hole, but I spend a lot of time cleaning
it out and it won't thread onto some manufacturers' nozzles.
<https://www.homaxproducts.com/kitchen-bath/caulk-tools/homax-caulk-tips>
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/18 2:17 PM, John McGaw wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 1:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>> caulk tubes.
>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>> worth it.
>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>
>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
>> reasons.
>> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
>> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
>> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
>> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
>> job.
>> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
>> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
>> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
>> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
>> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
>> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
>> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>
>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
>> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
>> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
>> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>
>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
>> no-brainer for me.
>> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
>> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>>
>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
>> use one.
>>
>>
> Seems kind of excessive but I guess YMMV. Personally, I've been using
> these:
>
> https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000H5S8X4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
>
>
> for a while and they are foolproof. I had a tube of construction
> adhesive that I capped back in early 2014 with one of these and opened
> it a week ago and it was still perfectly usable. My biggest problem was
> that I had bought a big contractor-size package of them and it appears
> that during a post-project cleanup they got sent to the landfill so I
> had to buy replacements (in a smaller package this time).
I've used those, too, John and they do work very well.
But you are stuck with whatever size hole you cut on the tube nozzle (or
bigger).
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
...
>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>> good.
>
> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
> more as a butt-saver.
>
> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
> seat, yea! Nope, crap again!  It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!!  :-)
>
> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
I'd've thunk for somebody working pretty-much continuously would use up
tubes fast enough to not be such a problem as for the homeowner/handyman
who may be months between (like I, for the most part as far as that kind
of work)...
That said, certainly for the "high-priced spread" could well be worth
the material savings and obviously if it's a livelihood rather than
hobby or just personal then "time is money" will likely override other
considerations.
That said also :) I've had moderately good success with using
appropriately-sized wirenut to cap a tube and then place in sealable
plastic baggie; can squeeze enough air out of them it seems to
significantly slow the cure rate on those that are
oxidation-driven...plus, keeps any mess contained if in the truck or the
like and something gets dropped on the tube and smushes it instead of
getting all over...
I may order the sample just to see, though; is cute idea...
--
On 3/27/18 2:37 PM, dpb wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is
>>>> cheap enough to make reusing caulk worth it.
>>>> https://www.tubeanew.com
> ...
>
>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving
>>> less than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this
>>> should be good.
>>
>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see
>> it more as a butt-saver.
>>
>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for
>> some calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have
>> to run to the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a
>> tube under my seat, yea! Nope, crap again! It's all dried up in
>> the nozzle or the nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I
>> have Tube-A-New!! :-)
>>
>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>
> I'd've thunk for somebody working pretty-much continuously would use
> up tubes fast enough to not be such a problem as for the
> homeowner/handyman who may be months between (like I, for the most
> part as far as that kind of work)...
>
> That said, certainly for the "high-priced spread" could well be worth
> the material savings and obviously if it's a livelihood rather than
> hobby or just personal then "time is money" will likely override
> other considerations.
>
> That said also :) I've had moderately good success with using
> appropriately-sized wirenut to cap a tube and then place in sealable
> plastic baggie; can squeeze enough air out of them it seems to
> significantly slow the cure rate on those that are
> oxidation-driven...plus, keeps any mess contained if in the truck or
> the like and something gets dropped on the tube and smushes it
> instead of getting all over...
>
> I may order the sample just to see, though; is cute idea...
>
>
> --
Certainly, it's not an issue for someone who, like you said, is using
the same product every day for the same tasks. Window installers, for
example.
But it's perfect for me. I like to have "some of everything" in the
van. I usually keep a few varieties and colors of this type of tubes in
the van...
<https://www.lowes.com/pd/GE-Silicone-II-2-8-oz-Clear-Silicone-Caulk/3102449>
They are big enough for smaller jobs and touch-ups, but big enough to
save for later use. Plus, the screw-on/off cap works very well.
The Tube-A-New should allow me to use left-over full size tubes for this
purpose as well.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/2018 3:17 PM, John McGaw wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 1:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>> caulk tubes.
>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>> worth it.
>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>
>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
>> reasons.
>> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
>> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
>> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
>> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
>> job.
>> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
>> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
>> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
>> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too big.
>> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
>> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
>> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>
>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
>> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
>> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
>> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>
>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
>> no-brainer for me.
>> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
>> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>>
>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
>> use one.
>>
>>
> Seems kind of excessive but I guess YMMV. Personally, I've been using
> these:
>
> https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000H5S8X4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
>
>
A local hardware store sells hard rubber caulk caps that I started using
a few years ago. I've never had a problem with hard caulk using them.
Prior to that I used the pinky finger from a latex glove and electrical
tape, also with no problems.
The topic product appears to waste a fair amount when cutting the top.
Considering the hardness is usually within the plastic stem and rarely,
just below that at the surface, cutting that much off is a waste, IMO.
Wasting good material drives me bananas regardless how cheap it may be.
On 3/27/18 3:48 PM, Meanie wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 3:17 PM, John McGaw wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 1:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>>> caulk tubes.
>>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>>> worth it.
>>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>
>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
>>> reasons.
>>> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
>>> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
>>> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be able
>>> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
>>> job.
>>> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
>>> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
>>> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van, but
>>> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too
>>> big.
>>> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
>>> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
>>> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>
>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
>>> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
>>> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
>>> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>
>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
>>> no-brainer for me.
>>> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
>>> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>>>
>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
>>> use one.
>>>
>>>
>> Seems kind of excessive but I guess YMMV. Personally, I've been using
>> these:
>>
>> https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000H5S8X4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
>>
>>
>
> A local hardware store sells hard rubber caulk caps that I started using
> a few years ago. I've never had a problem with hard caulk using them.
> Prior to that I used the pinky finger from a latex glove and electrical
> tape, also with no problems.
>
That doesn't get you a smaller hole if needed.
> The topic product appears to waste a fair amount when cutting the top.
> Considering the hardness is usually within the plastic stem and rarely,
> just below that at the surface, cutting that much off is a waste, IMO.
> Wasting good material drives me bananas regardless how cheap it may be.
>
Their demonstrations are for, well, demonstration purposes. :-)
I'm sure it could be cut off closer to the nozzle.
Some water-based product can harden well into the tube.
Either way, cutting it off too far is still saving more material than
throwing the tube away because you can't use it.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/18 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> On Tue, 27 Mar 2018 14:11:15 -0500, -MIKE- <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> On 3/27/18 1:57 PM, Leon wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>>>>> another tube.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>>>>> I use one.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>>>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>>>>> good.
>>>>
>>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>>>> more as a butt-saver.
>>>>
>>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>>>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>>>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again!  It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!!  :-)
>>>>
>>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
>>> situation. LOL
>>>
>>> Now where is that utility knife???
>>
>> Utility knives and in the same category as tape measures in my book.
>> There needs to one within reach at any and every location I keep or use
>> tools.
>> Every bench, vehicle, tool box, everywhere. :-)
>
> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
> am in my house or at work.
>
YES, pencils, too.
(and reading glasses)
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/27/2018 4:55 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
> On 3/27/18 3:48 PM, Meanie wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 3:17 PM, John McGaw wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 1:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>>>> caulk tubes.
>>>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>>>> worth it.
>>>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>
>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>> several
>>>> reasons.
>>>> 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with perfectly good caulk,
>>>> adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff.
>>>> 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>> able
>>>> to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one for each
>>>> job.
>>>> 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate
>>>> when I have to run to the store to get some tube-based product that I
>>>> know I have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van,
>>>> but
>>>> I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's been cut too
>>>> big.
>>>> 4. I've used every single "caulk saver" product out there and while
>>>> some of them work ok, none of them completely solve the problem and all
>>>> of them cost as much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>
>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk (even
>>>> though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some of the
>>>> specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products are up near
>>>> and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>
>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once is a
>>>> no-brainer for me.
>>>> Also, the design makes it pretty easy to push the caulk out the
>>>> Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on another tube.
>>>>
>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as I
>>>> use one.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> Seems kind of excessive but I guess YMMV. Personally, I've been using
>>> these:
>>>
>>> https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000H5S8X4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
>>>
>>>
>>
>> A local hardware store sells hard rubber caulk caps that I started
>> using a few years ago. I've never had a problem with hard caulk using
>> them. Prior to that I used the pinky finger from a latex glove and
>> electrical tape, also with no problems.
>>
>
> That doesn't get you a smaller hole if needed.
>
I usually don't use a larger hole for most caulking jobs. It's easier to
go slower using a smaller opening and fill a larger gap than to have a
large opening trying to fill a smaller gap.
>
>> The topic product appears to waste a fair amount when cutting the top.
>> Considering the hardness is usually within the plastic stem and
>> rarely, just below that at the surface, cutting that much off is a
>> waste, IMO. Wasting good material drives me bananas regardless how
>> cheap it may be.
>>
>
> Their demonstrations are for, well, demonstration purposes. :-)
> I'm sure it could be cut off closer to the nozzle.
> Some water-based product can harden well into the tube.
> Either way, cutting it off too far is still saving more material than
> throwing the tube away because you can't use it.
>
>
Agree with that but after viewing the video, I'm under the impression if
one cuts near the top and apply the cap, it'll be too long for the gun.
Though, I didn't pay close attention.
On 3/27/18 8:29 PM, Meanie wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 4:55 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> On 3/27/18 3:48 PM, Meanie wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 3:17 PM, John McGaw wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/2018 1:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is
>>>>> cheap enough to make reusing caulk worth it.
>>>>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van
>>>>> for several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills
>>>>> with perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other
>>>>> stuff. 2. Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I
>>>>> would rather be able to use one tube of caulk for several
>>>>> jobs, than buy a new one for each job. 3. Most importantly:
>>>>> whether in the shop or on the job site, I hate when I have to
>>>>> run to the store to get some tube-based product that I know I
>>>>> have a used tube of on the shelf or under the seat of my van,
>>>>> but I can't use because the tip is all dried up and/or it's
>>>>> been cut too big. 4. I've used every single "caulk saver"
>>>>> product out there and while some of them work ok, none of
>>>>> them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters'
>>>>> caulk (even though I still don't want to have it in a
>>>>> landfill) but some of the specialty adhesives and most of the
>>>>> pure silicone products are up near and over 10 bucks a tube,
>>>>> now.
>>>>>
>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than
>>>>> once is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty
>>>>> easy to push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse
>>>>> it again on another tube.
>>>>>
>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as
>>>>> soon as I use one.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Seems kind of excessive but I guess YMMV. Personally, I've been
>>>> using these:
>>>>
>>>> https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000H5S8X4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> A local hardware store sells hard rubber caulk caps that I
>>> started using a few years ago. I've never had a problem with hard
>>> caulk using them. Prior to that I used the pinky finger from a
>>> latex glove and electrical tape, also with no problems.
>>>
>>
>> That doesn't get you a smaller hole if needed.
>>
> I usually don't use a larger hole for most caulking jobs. It's easier
> to go slower using a smaller opening and fill a larger gap than to
> have a large opening trying to fill a smaller gap.
>
There are many application for which a larger bead of caulk is required.
I prefer to cut the nozzle to the require size for efficient application.
In my opinion it's much more efficient and neat to cut the nozzle to the
correct size for the required bead, and not build it up.
Also, Murphy's Law dictates that any used caulk tube will have a larger
hole than is needed for the next application. :-)
>>
>>> The topic product appears to waste a fair amount when cutting the
>>> top. Considering the hardness is usually within the plastic stem
>>> and rarely, just below that at the surface, cutting that much off
>>> is a waste, IMO. Wasting good material drives me bananas
>>> regardless how cheap it may be.
>>>
>>
>> Their demonstrations are for, well, demonstration purposes. :-)
>> I'm sure it could be cut off closer to the nozzle. Some water-based
>> product can harden well into the tube. Either way, cutting it off
>> too far is still saving more material than throwing the tube away
>> because you can't use it.
>>
>
> Agree with that but after viewing the video, I'm under the impression
> if one cuts near the top and apply the cap, it'll be too long for the
> gun. Though, I didn't pay close attention.
>
You're right, you didn't. :-p
They address that issue by instructing the user to simply cut off an the
extra length from the back of the tube. Simple, quick, easy solution
that would take about 20 seconds.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/28/18 10:31 AM, Leon wrote:
> On 3/27/2018 2:57 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>> On 3/27/18 2:37 PM, dpb wrote:
>>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and
>>>>>> is cheap enough to make reusing caulk worth it.
>>>>>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>> ...
>>>
>>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only
>>>>> saving less than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff
>>>>> this should be good.
>>>>
>>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I
>>>> see it more as a butt-saver.
>>>>
>>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises
>>>> for some calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now
>>>> I have to run to the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have
>>>> half a tube under my seat, yea! Nope, crap again! It's all
>>>> dried up in the nozzle or the nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from
>>>> the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!! :-)
>>>>
>>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>>
>>> I'd've thunk for somebody working pretty-much continuously would
>>> use up tubes fast enough to not be such a problem as for the
>>> homeowner/handyman who may be months between (like I, for the
>>> most part as far as that kind of work)...
>>>
>>> That said, certainly for the "high-priced spread" could well be
>>> worth the material savings and obviously if it's a livelihood
>>> rather than hobby or just personal then "time is money" will
>>> likely override other considerations.
>>>
>>> That said also :) I've had moderately good success with using
>>> appropriately-sized wirenut to cap a tube and then place in
>>> sealable plastic baggie; can squeeze enough air out of them it
>>> seems to significantly slow the cure rate on those that are
>>> oxidation-driven...plus, keeps any mess contained if in the truck
>>> or the like and something gets dropped on the tube and smushes
>>> it instead of getting all over...
>>>
>>> I may order the sample just to see, though; is cute idea...
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>
>> Certainly, it's not an issue for someone who, like you said, is
>> using the same product every day for the same tasks. Window
>> installers, for example.
>>
>> But it's perfect for me. I like to have "some of everything" in
>> the van. I usually keep a few varieties and colors of this type of
>> tubes in the van...
>> <https://www.lowes.com/pd/GE-Silicone-II-2-8-oz-Clear-Silicone-Caulk/3102449>
>>
>>
>> They are big enough for smaller jobs and touch-ups, but big enough
>> to save for later use. Plus, the screw-on/off cap works very
>> well.
>>
>> The Tube-A-New should allow me to use left-over full size tubes for
>> this purpose as well.
>>
>>
>
> Thinking a little more about this, can you reuse them? Seems that
> they renew a tube that is dried up on the end but it will dry up
> again if you do not use the remainder of the tube
The only thing that keeps you from reusing a tube of caulk is usually
that the nozzle is all clogged up and dry, and often even some inside
the tube. As we all know, it's very difficult to pull dried caulk out
of a tapered nozzle from the small end. And when you do, you usually
end up buggering up the nozzle, and you need to put on an aftermarket
nozzle or fashion some other "shop-tip" solution.
Imagine if you could take the entire nozzle end off of every tube of
caulk, so you could pull out the died caulk from the big side, wipe off
the residue, put the nozzle back on the tube and start again with a
fresh nozzle.
That's what this Tube-A-New accomplishes. And since it slides right
off, it can be cleaned out and reused again, if that's what the user
wants to do.
So yes, I see them as a reusable product. However, you now have to deal
with the hole size issue. Not a big deal if you need the same size or
bigger, just like with any tube.
I could see easily getting 2-3 reuses out of the same one before
deciding to dump it.
I could also see someone keeping 3 Tube-A-News for each material, with 3
different sized nozzle holes. There is some labor involved in cleaning
out the Tube-A-New after each use, but it's probably akin to painters
cleaning their brushes.
It would be a trade-off. The time it takes to clean them out to keep
'em out of the landfill vs. the convenience of having a bunch of cheap,
disposable, single-use items that don't require any extra time for
clean-up.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 3/28/18 10:06 PM, Leon wrote:
> On 3/28/2018 8:44 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>> On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 10:23:34 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>>> Snip
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
>>>> am in my house or at work.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I typically have 5~6 pencils in the shop. They are typically in one
>>> spot or no where to be found. :~)
>>>
>>> My lumber supplier gives me a new pencil or two when I buy wood. These
>>> are good pencils and are closely guarded in my desk drawer. I think I
>>> have about 50 stashed away. I give the pink ones to my wife. ;~)
>>
>> I've bought packs of 50 .7mm mechanical pencils at WallyWorld for
>> about $5.
>>
>
> I still prefer something with a point, relatively sharp one. Might be
> from my old drafting days. I do not do a lot of marking so a good
> pencil will last me a long time. It has probably been a couple of years
> since I have taken one of those pencils out of my desk. It's not unusual
> for me to not make a single mark during a full day of cutting wood.
I have my "old drafting days," too!
I rue the day when I left my drafting tools somewhere, including all the
pencils and leads.
To this day, I prefer a really hard lead like a 2H or higher... if I can
find it.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
On 4/2/18 9:49 PM, Doug Miller wrote:
> -MIKE- <[email protected]> wrote in news:[email protected]:
>
>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your half-used
>> caulk tubes.
>> This is a really cool product and is cheap enough to make reusing caulk
>> worth it.
>> https://www.tubeanew.com
>>
>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for several
>> reasons.[...]
>
> Mike, thanks much for posting this. I've already ordered the $1 sample, and I expect I'll order a
> 5-pack within a day or two after that arrives. Finally, something that might actually *work* for
> saving caulk!
>
I got my 5-pack the other day.
I'm waiting for a "real world" usage to post a review.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
www.mikedrums.com
Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:uMWdnQxTOvEJLibHnZ2dnUU7-
[email protected]:
> On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> Snip
>
>
>>
>> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
>> am in my house or at work.
>>
>
> I typically have 5~6 pencils in the shop. They are typically in one
> spot or no where to be found. :~)
>
> My lumber supplier gives me a new pencil or two when I buy wood. These
> are good pencils and are closely guarded in my desk drawer. I think I
> have about 50 stashed away. I give the pink ones to my wife. ;~)
I got this neat little thing from Lee Valley that held a pencil on a
retractable cord. It's great for when you're doing a lot of work where
you put the pencil down often. (Turning gets to be like that sometimes--
make a mark, cut the mark off, replace it.)
I got jabbed a few times bending down to pick something up, so I tend to
not to use it.
FWIW, a GOOD pencil sharpener IS required shop equipment. I went for the
"old school" school-style (Boston L, or X-acto L now) pencil sharpener.
No batteries, no electric cords, and the pencil is sharp in 15-20
seconds.
Puckdropper
--
http://www.puckdroppersplace.us/rec.woodworking
A mini archive of some of rec.woodworking's best and worst!
On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
> On Tuesday, March 27, 2018 at 2:57:47 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
>> On 3/27/2018 1:30 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>> On 3/27/18 1:15 PM, Leon wrote:
>>>> On 3/27/2018 12:59 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
>>>>> Finally someone came up with a great solution re-using your
>>>>> half-used caulk tubes. This is a really cool product and is cheap
>>>>> enough to make reusing caulk worth it. https://www.tubeanew.com
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm going to order a 5-pack of these to keep in the work van for
>>>>> several reasons. 1. I'm not a fan of filling landfills with
>>>>> perfectly good caulk, adhesives, roofing tar, and other stuff. 2.
>>>>> Even though I pass the cost on to the client, I would rather be
>>>>> able to use one tube of caulk for several jobs, than buy a new one
>>>>> for each job. 3. Most importantly: whether in the shop or on the
>>>>> job site, I hate when I have to run to the store to get some
>>>>> tube-based product that I know I have a used tube of on the shelf
>>>>> or under the seat of my van, but I can't use because the tip is all
>>>>> dried up and/or it's been cut too big. 4. I've used every single
>>>>> "caulk saver" product out there and while some of them work ok,
>>>>> none of them completely solve the problem and all of them cost as
>>>>> much or more than this Tube-A-New.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not that concerned about wasting a $3 tube of painters' caulk
>>>>> (even though I still don't want to have it in a landfill) but some
>>>>> of the specialty adhesives and most of the pure silicone products
>>>>> are up near and over 10 bucks a tube, now.
>>>>>
>>>>> A buck and a half to be able to use silicone caulk more than once
>>>>> is a no-brainer for me. Also, the design makes it pretty easy to
>>>>> push the caulk out the Tube-A-New backwards and reuse it again on
>>>>> another tube.
>>>>>
>>>>> Can't wait to get these. I'll report back with a review as soon as
>>>>> I use one.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Looks great but might be more expensive if you are only saving less
>>>> than half of a tube. But for the expensive stuff this should be
>>>> good.
>>>
>>> It would definitely save money for the expensive stuff, but I see it
>>> more as a butt-saver.
>>>
>>> There are so many times when I'm on a job and the need arises for some
>>> calking that was previously unplanned for. Crap! Now I have to run to
>>> the hardware store for caulk, no wait! I have half a tube under my
>>> seat, yea! Nope, crap again!  It's all dried up in the nozzle or the
>>> nozzle is cut back to 1/2" from the end. Wait, I have Tube-A-New!!  :-)
>>>
>>> Worth every penny for that considering the time it saves.
>>>
>>>
>> There is that and excuse me for forgetting the "get you out of a jam"
>> situation. LOL
>>
>> Now where is that utility knife???
>
> Speaking of dried up caulk and utility knives...
>
> A bunch of years back I came across a full tube of caulk that was dried
> up solid, end to end. Just for fun I grabbed a utility knife and cut the
> tube enough to be able to peel it away, leaving me holding a hard, rubbery
> cylinder of caulk.
>
> First off, the caulk would have made a perfect "blunt instrument" that
> would have really confused the local Medical Examiner. Slightly rubbery,
> but hard enough to break a bone or crack a skull.
Whew! I thought you may have been going another direction with that. ;~)
On 3/27/2018 4:51 PM, [email protected] wrote:
Snip
>
> +1 ...and pencils. There has to be one within reach from wherever I
> am in my house or at work.
>
I typically have 5~6 pencils in the shop. They are typically in one
spot or no where to be found. :~)
My lumber supplier gives me a new pencil or two when I buy wood. These
are good pencils and are closely guarded in my desk drawer. I think I
have about 50 stashed away. I give the pink ones to my wife. ;~)