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2016 Spring Home Improvement

LINCON DAILY

NEWS.com

May 2, 2016 Page 7

3. Lending tools to your friends and neighbors

will result in broken and unreturned tools!

Our next door neighbors growing up were among

our best friends we had in this life. We shared

everything with them, including our tools. When

we wanted to use our hammer we knew right where

it was: at our next door neighbor’s house. We

could visit it there any time.

Not meaning to sound like a tool-Scrooge here, I

recommend that the next time anyone asks if they

can borrow your framing nail gun, you just say

NO. If they ask to borrow your pipe wrenches, you

just say NO. If they ask to borrow your drill press,

your table saw, your staple gun, your battery-driven

circular saw, hammer drill, or any other tool in your

collection, you just say NO. You are not being

mean. You bought those tools for your own use to

save hundreds, if not thousands of dollars over a

lifetime in home repairs, and if your neighbor has

your tools, you don’t.

Principle 1:

Your neighbors will likely follow

the principle of delaying the return of your tools

so they can forget whose tools they are. I’m not

calling them thieves; this is just the way it normally

goes. The longer they reside at your neighbor’s

house the more likely they are to change ownership

and become your neighbor’s tools.

Principle 2:

Your friend or neighbor didn’t buy

the tool in the first place, didn’t read the owner’s

manual, and likely doesn’t know that you shouldn’t

twist the handle on the recip saw as they are

sawing through the branch on their cypress tree and

therefore didn’t realize that such a maneuver would

snap off the blade and the shaft of the saw, thereby

rendering it worthless. Borrowed tools are much

more likely broken by the persons borrowing them

than by the persons owning them.

Principle 3:

Even in the most perfect situation

with the best intentioned friends or neighbors, if

your tool is in their possession it is not in your

possession. And given the odds, if they have your

tool you will likely need it.

Principle 4:

It doesn’t matter how well you

label your tools or inscribe your name, address,

telephone number and SSN# on your tools,

the moment they leave your possession their

identification is moot. Possession is 9/10’s. “Hey,

that tool has Joe’s name on it. Is it Joe’s tool?”

“Naw, he gave it to me years ago.” The label does

not ever guarantee return.

Do not loan out your tools! They are like your

treasure. You don’t just loan out the family jewels.

You keep them organized and locked up and you

know where they are for the next time you need to

use them. So it is with your expensive tools.

So, buy the best tools you can afford every time

you buy a new tool. It usually pays to read

consumer reports or reviews before you buy them.

Take your time. The most important thing is that

you get a tool that will do the job and last to do the

jobs over the next 30 years. Buy tools that you can

leave to your children or your grandchildren.

Second, organize your tools so that you can put

your hand on it the next time you need it without

cleaning the garage or your entire workshop. And

finally, never, never, never loan out your expensive

tools. Maybe go to the dollar store and buy some

of those faux tools to loan to your friends and

neighbors as a courtesy, but don’t let them even see

your nail gun collection.

[Jim Youngquist]