I see this daily. I take care of about 35 pieces of ride on equipment(zero turn, out front mowers and utility vehicles), multiple blowers, weedeaters, chainsaws and small walk behind packers, painters, aerators and the like.
Co workers are AMAZED when I have a hydraulic pump or cylinder torn apart or a chainsaw in pieces on my bench. Like, they have never seen anything like it. It just amazes me the lack of try in this world. Did I know how to rebuild that first saw? Nope, but I took it apart and learned a skill. My motto is, someone put it together, I can take it apart and fix it. Most are scared to even try, don't want to fail I guess. But if you fail at something, hopefully you will learn from it, I know I have.
I have also made tools to get stuff apart. JD will not sell a clutch removal tool for their small gators or bunker rakes. I made one.
Crude, but does the job.
Also welded up a wrench for a Toro workman tierod. As a regular wrench wouldn’t fit in the tight space. That is the tiered beside the pink tool.
I contribute a lot of my thinking skills to building Legos as a kid. I loved them. Would always be creating something new, mixing kits and just having fun.
As @D2Cat said, its the problem solving skills. Anyone can be taught to spin a wrench.
Co workers are AMAZED when I have a hydraulic pump or cylinder torn apart or a chainsaw in pieces on my bench. Like, they have never seen anything like it. It just amazes me the lack of try in this world. Did I know how to rebuild that first saw? Nope, but I took it apart and learned a skill. My motto is, someone put it together, I can take it apart and fix it. Most are scared to even try, don't want to fail I guess. But if you fail at something, hopefully you will learn from it, I know I have.
I have also made tools to get stuff apart. JD will not sell a clutch removal tool for their small gators or bunker rakes. I made one.
Crude, but does the job.
Also welded up a wrench for a Toro workman tierod. As a regular wrench wouldn’t fit in the tight space. That is the tiered beside the pink tool.
I contribute a lot of my thinking skills to building Legos as a kid. I loved them. Would always be creating something new, mixing kits and just having fun.
As @D2Cat said, its the problem solving skills. Anyone can be taught to spin a wrench.
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