As I begin to write this post, I am freaking cold man! I went into work early last night, wearing shorts, and by the morning the temp had dropped from the 70s to the 50s. Yes, this may sound a bit whinny for me after I just spent five years living in North Dakota, but I am a Floridian through and through which means that even at 50 degrees I am cold.
So, no that I have some long pants and a hoodie on, I will continue.
I was supposed to provide a deposition yesterday at a local court reporters as part of an upcoming trail I am a witness in. I witnessed an assault earlier this year and now have been subpoenaed to testify on behave of the State and Circle K as to what I saw. The defense consul wanted a deposition from me, but when I showed up to the court reporters, I found out that the lawyer involved with the case has the swine flu. I don’t know yet when this will be rescheduled, but I am sure it will happen at the worst time.
Since I had extra time to kill yesterday, I decided to go “pre tool shopping.” With my new job comes the responsibility of providing most of my own tools. I will need a lot of “common tools”; wrenches, screwdrivers, pliers, etc. As a sheet metal technician in the aviation industry, there are a lot of specialty tools I will have to gather up as well. I am going to be getting a nice new rivet gun, drill, grinder, hammers, and other tools that would seem special to the lam-in, but are very common and essential to me.
That brought me to my local Sears. Their line of Craftsman Tools will meet just about all my needs. I walked up and down every tool isle deciding and recording every tool I think I will need that they have available for purchase. After scrutinizing each isle, I ended up with a list that tops $2400.00. Mind you, that is just an estimate. When all is said and done, I am sure the final cost will be closer to $4000.00. Good tools are expensive and even though Sears has most of what I need, there are a good deal of tools they do not have, which I will more than likely find on the internet.
My quest to build my tool box is well under way. I already have a rather large set of mechanics tools, which will give me a nice start. Once I secure some funding, I will get what I would consider the essentials to round out the beginnings of my tool box. I figure it will take me the better part of a year to fill up my tool box to have have everything I need.
Looks like I will be developing my own relationship with Sears, the Snap On guy, and the Mac Tools man. I wonder if any of them are on Twitter or Facebook?
If you’re interested in learning more about the tools of my trade, or if you’re just really board, here are some links to some of the places where I will be buying my tools. Enjoy.
Aviation Tool Supply
http://www.aircraft-tool.com/shop/main.aspx
Sky Geek
http://www.skygeek.com/tools.html
Brown Tool



