Return-Path: Received: from marvkaye.olsusa.com ([207.30.195.108]) by truman.olsusa.com (Post.Office MTA v3.5.1 release 219 ID# 0-64832U3500L350S0V35) with SMTP id com for ; Fri, 11 Feb 2000 20:35:38 -0500 Message-Id: <3.0.3.32.20000211203935.0318c510@olsusa.com> Date: Fri, 11 Feb 2000 20:39:35 -0500 To: lancair.list@olsusa.com From: Marvin Kaye Subject: Tool bin? X-Mailing-List: lancair.list@olsusa.com Mime-Version: 1.0 <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> << Lancair Builders' Mail List >> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >> I wish I could take credit for having come up with this idea, but I'm afraid that I cannot, in good conscience, do so. During a discussion with Scott Dahlgren awhile back he mentioned this concept to me, but for whatever reason I managed to relegate it to some dusty corner of my mind and it only jumped back out at me today when Jim Frantz sent along the photo of his little Tinnerman countersinking tool. It has probably happened to most of you during the building of your projects that you have found yourself requiring some tool to do a particular job, only to discover that it costs $200+ and you're only going to use it this one time... how on earth do you justify an expenditure like that knowing that after its use it's going to be sitting in your toolbox without any imaginable future purpose? And just how many things like that have you purchased because you're a bit "Tim Allen-esque", a person whose heart races when being passed by a Snap-On truck, and whose eyes glaze over when in the Home Depot tool department? I am sure that we all probably fall a little between the above categories somewhere, in many instances with more tools than are healthy, but still usually missing the one special tool that would make this weekend's planned activities progress as smoothly as a 2000 grit final rubout. What if we were to put together a virtual communal Tool Bin, and make various and sundry of our little used (but indispensible when needed) tools available to fellow subscribers of the LML and LNN on a rental basis? Imagine that it's time for you to plumb your hydraulic lines... you open up the ACS catalog and find out that a high quality tubing bender, tubing cutter, and top-o'-the-line flaring tool is going to run you upwards of $300. Wouldn't it be nice if you could rent the entire setup for a week for $25, get all your cutting, bending, and flaring done and then send the tools back from whence they came, and not have to look at them like some significant portion of a radio sitting in your tool drawer? I think it would. Here's what I propose... if some of you with tools out there would like to participate, drop me a line privately. If there are enough of you to make it worthwhile I'll setup a Tool Bin on the LML website with several forms... one for people with tools available, one for people seeking a tool, the last for an actual tool rental order. I'll prepare and maintain a table of tools, both available or desired, along with their weekly rental rates, their shipping weights and the ZIPcodes that they'll come from. I'll setup a link to the USPS rate calculators so renters can figure out the shipping costs in advance. If someone finds a tool they want to rent they fill out a rental form which will include a credit card number for security purposes... the credit card will not be processed unless the tools aren't returned, at which point identical new tools will be ordered and sent to the person who provided them. I can pass the shipping info to the tool providers and suggest that the best method of payment would be to include a check in the package when returning the tool. (I could also process credit card rentals, but I'm afraid that would get really cumbersome... let me think about it some more.) I think this would work nicely for everyone out there, and hope that I'll get some feedback from those of you who would like to participate, or even from those of you who think it's a stupid idea and that I shouldn't be wasting our time with such nonsense. The ball's in your court. I'm open to suggestions and alternative ideas. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> LML website: http://www.olsusa.com/Users/Mkaye/maillist.html Builders' Bookstore: http://www.buildersbooks.com/lancair Please send your photos and drawings to marvkaye@olsusa.com. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>