MB wrote:
> You didn't say how long to go back, so I vote for the hand plane
>
> Biscuit joiner is pretty cool for more modern stuff
I said the LAST truly innovative tool which would mean the most recent.
There must have been some new ideas since the hand plane. Then again,
maybe your standards are REALLY high!
FoggyTown
"charlie b" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Dewalt
> Dewalt 621 Plunge Router incorporating
> - electronic variable speed
> - soft start
> - on/off switch on one of the handles
> - plunge lock on the other handle
> - dust collection port in one of the plunge
> columns
I agree. An outstanding router.
Instead of my 4 different routers (2 PC, 2 DW) it would have been smarter to
just get 2 or 3 DW 621s. Then the jigs would have been interchangeable...
<sigh>
-- Mark
"FoggyTown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The silly advertising thread in here raised and interesting question.
> What was the last TRULY innovative hand or power tool that hit the
> general market? The DeWalt combi mitre/table saw maybe?
>
> FoggyTown
>
Saw Stop.
FoggyTown wrote:
> The silly advertising thread in here raised and interesting question.
> What was the last TRULY innovative hand or power tool that hit the
> general market? The DeWalt combi mitre/table saw maybe?
>
> FoggyTown
>
Screwdrivers with multiple tips.
--
Never continue in a job you don't enjoy. If you're happy in what you're
doing, you'll like yourself, you'll have inner peace. And if you have
that, along with physical health, you will have had more success than
you could possibly have imagined.
Johnny Carson (1925 - 2005)
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J. Clarke wrote:
>> Screwdrivers with multiple tips.
>
> The standardized 1/4" hex shank perhaps. Screwdrivers with
> intgerchangeable tips go _way_ back. The old Yankee screwdrivers have
> interchangeable tips that go in like it was for keeps. Had one for, well,
> I don't know how long--I was a little kid when I first noticed it, before
> I realized that the tip was removable. Probably never would have if I
> hadn't noticed a set of tips for it at Sears one day.
>
>
The one I have in mind is labeled "Workforce" and it doubles as a hex
driver for two sizes ... 1/4 & 5/16, IIRC. The drive shaft holds a
double-ended bit at each end with one end of the shaft inserted into the
handle.
I did machine maintenance for 3 years and it and a couple of small
crescent wrenches kept me from having to lug a toolbox around. (That
stinkin' tool pouch weighed plenty already!)
Bill
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FoggyTown wrote:
>
> The silly advertising thread in here raised and interesting question.
> What was the last TRULY innovative hand or power tool that hit the
> general market? The DeWalt combi mitre/table saw maybe?
>
> FoggyTown
Veritas
Medium Shoulder Plane & Large Shoulder Plane
Glen-Drake
Tite-Mark marking gauge - with option for a pair of
mortise scribes
JoinTech
Clincher precision fence postioning system
Cabinet Maker Fence
Festool
Plunge Circular Saw with riving knife
Straight Edge Guide
Leight
FMT Jig
Japanese Pull Saws
- not the saws themselves, they've been around a long long
time, but their hitting the U.S. market
Battery Powered Impact Driver
though not in every home handyman's garage yet
it will be
Dewalt
Dewalt 621 Plunge Router incorporating
- electronic variable speed
- soft start
- on/off switch on one of the handles
- plunge lock on the other handle
- dust collection port in one of the plunge
columns
Kreg
Pocket Hole Jig
Will stop there.
charlie b
"Patriarch" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>> Instead of my 4 different routers (2 PC, 2 DW) it would have been
>> smarter to just get 2 or 3 DW 621s. Then the jigs would have been
>> interchangeable... <sigh>
>>
>> -- Mark
>>
>
> Well, yeah. But it took those three or four other routers to find the
> 'one' that you want to work with.
>
> Learning isn't necessarily cheap.
Yabbut then I'm really a "cut it three times and it's still too short" guy.
The 621 was my first router. (We won't talk about the 1/4" Craftsman
Christmas gift from SWMBO, with its random-height and variable alignment
"features.")
-- Mark
"Mark Jerde" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:12Bih.3206$Iy5.1893@trnddc01:
> "charlie b" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>> Dewalt
>> Dewalt 621 Plunge Router incorporating
>> - electronic variable speed
>> - soft start
>> - on/off switch on one of the handles
>> - plunge lock on the other handle
>> - dust collection port in one of the plunge
>> columns
>
> I agree. An outstanding router.
>
> Instead of my 4 different routers (2 PC, 2 DW) it would have been
> smarter to just get 2 or 3 DW 621s. Then the jigs would have been
> interchangeable... <sigh>
>
> -- Mark
>
Well, yeah. But it took those three or four other routers to find the
'one' that you want to work with.
Learning isn't necessarily cheap.
Patriarch
On Sat, 23 Dec 2006 03:19:57 -0500, Bill in Detroit wrote:
> FoggyTown wrote:
>> The silly advertising thread in here raised and interesting question.
>> What was the last TRULY innovative hand or power tool that hit the
>> general market? The DeWalt combi mitre/table saw maybe?
>>
>> FoggyTown
>>
> Screwdrivers with multiple tips.
The standardized 1/4" hex shank perhaps. Screwdrivers with
intgerchangeable tips go _way_ back. The old Yankee screwdrivers have
interchangeable tips that go in like it was for keeps. Had one for, well,
I don't know how long--I was a little kid when I first noticed it, before
I realized that the tip was removable. Probably never would have if I
hadn't noticed a set of tips for it at Sears one day.
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
"FoggyTown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The silly advertising thread in here raised and interesting question.
> What was the last TRULY innovative hand or power tool that hit the
> general market? The DeWalt combi mitre/table saw maybe?
>
> FoggyTown
>
Festool Domino