Popular Mechanics The Ultimate Tool Book: Every Tool You Need to Own
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About this ebook
This tool—or that? Learn how to choose the right one for tackling any home project and completing it quickly, correctly, and efficiently. The editors of Popular Mechanics share their expertise, explaining which tools deserve a prominent spot in your shop and how to keep them in tip-top shape.
Divided by type, this must-have guide covers multipurpose and single-purpose tools that cut, tighten, measure, and mark. You’ll also find tried-and-true suggestions, helpful notes, and simple hacks to make any job easier.
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Popular Mechanics The Ultimate Tool Book - Popular Mechanics
Chapter 01
CONSTRUCTION
Benchtop Table Saw
Brick Trowel
Carpenter’s Square
Chalk Line
Circular Saw
Claw Hammer
Combination Square
Concrete-Finishing Trowel
Concrete Float
Cordless Drill
Drywall Knife
Drywall Saw
Drywall Square
Earmuffs
Extension Cord
Extension Ladder
Flashlight
Gooseneck Bar
Hole Saw
Impact Driver
Jigsaw
Laser Level
Level
Mason’s Chisel
Nail Apron/Tool Bag
Plumb Bob
Reciprocating Saw
Safety Glasses
Saw Horses
Shop Vacuum
Sledgehammer
Snips
Speed Square
Stepladder
Tape Measure
Utility Knife
BENCHTOP TABLE SAW
At the heart of woodworking is geometry, and geometry is filled with all kinds of shapes. In the case of furniture, we’re usually talking rectangles. And nothing makes rectangles like a table saw. It’s fast, it’s efficient, and if you follow the manufacturer’s instructions and use a push stick, it’s also perfectly safe.
A benchtop table saw consists of a metal table through which a 10-inch diameter blade projects. The motor, the blade, and the geared apparatus that raises and lowers the blade and makes it tilt is housed in a cabinet below the table. You can raise or lower the blade depending on the thickness of the wood you want to cut. Today’s 10-inch saws allow you to cut a piece up to 3 inches thick. Benchtop table saws make standard rip cuts and crosscuts out of the box, and once you have your saw accurately adjusted, you can use it to cut precise woodworking joints.
PROVIDE STEADY LUBRICATION FOR BIG CUTTING JOBS
If you’re doing cutting that needs constant lubrication, like using a saw to cut through concrete, a five-gallon paint bucket is a handy tool. Gouge a hole in it near the bottom (about the diameter of a screwdriver will work), and fill it with water. If someone holds it above the cut, water will leak out at just the right rate to keep the saw blade wet.
BRICK TROWEL
In the hands of a skilled mason, a brick trowel is an amazing tool. It dispenses mortar into a joint to bond bricks together, taps bricks into position, and shaves off excess mortar for a clean joint. The diamond-shaped blade of the trowel is made of high-carbon steel, with an offset tang that connects the blade and handle. The best trowels are forged blade and tang from a single piece of steel, giving them a springiness that eases the burden of working with mortar.
To use a trowel, cut into the mortar as if you were serving it up like a slice of pie. When you tip the trowel sideways, the mortar sticks slightly, allowing you to shave off the mortar onto a brick in a slicing-sweeping motion. Brick trowels come in two basic shapes: London and Philadelphia. From above, the London pattern looks like the tip of a spear. The Philadelphia pattern is broader and holds a bit more mortar. Both are good. Choose the one that feels right for you.
USE THE BUTT END OF A BRICK TROWEL TO GENTLY BUMP A BRICK INTO PLACE
It’s not unusual to place a brick in its mortar bed and find that you can’t shove it completely into position, which should be about 1⁄16 to ⅛ inch back from the mason’s line and level across its width and length. If you’re an amateur bricklayer, you’ll find that brick trowels with a bumper on the end of the handle are particularly useful. It may take a lot of bumping to nudge bricks into position.
CARPENTER’S SQUARE
A carpenter’s square, also called a steel square or framing square, has been helping builders for the better part of forever. An L-shaped wonder, this tool is terrific for laying out rafters and stairs. There are two parts to this tool. The 2-inch-wide, 24-inch-long segment is the body of the square and where you’ll find the rafter tables and ruler etched in. The thinner and shorter section is called the tongue. The tongue measures 16 inches from the heel to the tip and is used to mark the plumb, or vertical, for example, cuts on rafters.
Stair buttons, sold separately, are hexagonal brass buttons which are clamped onto the square’s body and tongue at exact points to ensure consistency when marking stair stringers or when laying out rafters. These brass buttons act as stops for the square, so your layout is as accurate as possible.
When buying a carpenter’s square, you’ve got a choice between aluminum and steel. Either one works fine. Don’t buy chrome; a matte or painted finish will be easier to read in bright light. Having the increments etched into the blade is the best choice since this tool gets slid, flipped, and used on a number of surfaces—you don’t want them to wear off. While this is a pretty tough square, it isn’t impervious to damage. A good drop will knock it out of shape, as will twisting it. Handle it like the precision instrument it is designed to be.
CHALK LINE
As technology goes, the chalk line is quite simple: it’s a cranked spool of string that runs through a reservoir of powdered chalk. But nothing fancy works better for marking a straight line when ripping long boards, cutting drywall, or laying out the position of wall plates while framing.
If you don’t have a helper to hold the other end of the chalk line for you and the hook end won’t hold, just make a notch in the wood or drywall with a razor knife, then cinch the line into the cut. Then it’s just a matter of pulling the string tight like a bow string and letting go.
Not all chalk is the same. The reliable standard is blue chalk, since it is easy to see and to remove. Red chalk is nearly permanent and can stand up to some weathering, but for truly permanent marking, use dark blue, crimson, or black. If you’re working with fresh concrete and don’t want it to get stained, skip the colors and stick to white chalk as long as the concrete is dark enough that you’ll get some contrast. For interior work like aligning wallpaper or trim details, white chalk is preferable, as it’s easiest to remove and won’t bleed through your work.
When the time comes to remove your mark, don’t wipe it; you’ll smear it into the work. Instead, blow on the chalk. And don’t mix colors in the reservoir. If you need to switch colors, you’re better off buying another chalk line.
IRWIN MACH 6
Anybody who has reeled in an old-school chalk line could appreciate this high-speed model from IRWIN. Called the Mach6, it has a 6-to-1 metal gear assembly. For every turn of the handle, the drive gear spins six times. The line returns so rapidly, you’ve got to be careful to not whip yourself. You’ll also appreciate its impact-resistant aluminum body, wide double-prong hook, metal crank handle, and nicely designed chalk compartment for easy access.
CIRCULAR SAW
With amperage ratings between 13 and 15 amps and armed with a 7¼-inch blade, these saws can cut nearly anything. Lock in a masonry blade and these saws will scream through concrete (this kicks up a ton of fine dust, so wear a respirator). With the right blades, you can knock through composite materials, plywood, and dimensional lumber in no time flat.
Aside from the importance of amperage (which correlates directly to the saw’s power) and weight (which correlates directly to user fatigue), you want your saw to be a real fit for you. Before buying one, hold the saw and get a sense of it. Make sure it will fit your gloved hand. Other things you’ll want to check are blade depth and bevel adjustments. You’ll want easy-to-read adjustment scales and easy-to-reach levers.
Circular saws span a great range of models. The most popular is the side-winder circular saw, which features good durability, is light weight, and is easy to use. Need more torque and toughness? Try a worm-drive circular saw. If maneuverability for cutting sheet goods, siding, and flooring is paramount, we suggest the light 4½-inch bladed trim saw.
A fourth model is a track saw, which is the saw of choice for many scrupulous cabinetmakers and finish carpenters. These saws come with a proprietary track system, allowing you to make rips and cuts with the accuracy of a table saw, but with one advantage: portability and ease. It’s far easier to push a 12-pound saw through a 95-pound sheet of medium-density fiberboard than it is to balance and push that same sheet across a table saw. If space is an issue, or just the bulk and weight of a table saw has you stalemated, a track saw is a great alternative.
CLAW HAMMER
In 30,000 BC, someone altered the destiny of the human race by lashing a stick to a rock, a refinement that increased the user’s strike speed and accuracy. The hammer was born. Later, stone begat bronze, begat iron, begat steel—a material that could be forged into a ruthlessly efficient shape. Yet, after all these millennia, the wood handle remains, preferred by craftsmen for its light weight, shock absorbency, and balance. It was the post–World War II housing boom that finally transformed the profile of the modern hammer. Can’t-frame-’em-fast-enough carpenters on the West Coast needed still more speed, so they grafted elements of heavy rigging hatchets onto claw hammers. The result is the beefy, all-business, California-style framer, a swift, long-handled striking tool with a vicious claw.
Hammering is a repetitive act and lots of guys have suffered from carpenter’s elbow (like tennis elbow outside the country club). How do you avoid that? Get a titanium hammer from Stiletto Tools. A titanium hammer is lighter than your steel-headed counterpart and offers a significant reduction in recoil and vibration while delivering more swing force where it’s really needed: hitting the nail on the head. The design improvements on the tool include a magnetic nail starting slot, a side nail puller, and a rubberized titanium handle. They still make wooden-handled hammers with titanium heads, but these newer handles are slightly curved and specifically engineered to improve your striking force with a lot less effort. Titanium