I have used that bag for 10 years as an hvac installer. Lifetime warranty.
@WatchRob3 ай бұрын
Cool video, thanks. One suggestion on the music though, it had what sounds like a random table saw sound periodically, which I found super annoying, other than that small nitpick, good job!
@platinumhandymansolutions3 ай бұрын
I truly appreciate your feedback, thank you kindly.
@peterevans81943 ай бұрын
Interesting video, and some nice tools, but not knowing the typical jobs you get called to do, some of the choices (and omissions) seem "odd"...I hardly ever use sockets around the house for instances, certainly not enough to justify including them in an every day bag...if I did use them reasonably often, I' d also include a 2" , 6" and possibly a 12" extension. In reality, I have a couple of separate sockets sets I carry when needed... I don't really see many plumbing tools, stuff for doing minor but common repairs....You probably have a separate plumbing kit, but I would recommend carrying a wire "rake"/ unclogged tool and long nose pliers for unblocking sinks ect. I would also carry one of those plumbers multi tools for dealing with the various pipes under sinks...A garbage waste disposal wrench would be useful...I suggest these as they allow you to do small fairly common plumbing jobs quickly.. Apart from plumbing, I would want a compact/ folding dry wall saw, a selection of drill bits, a socket outlet tester, a usb tester, a smallish LED work light (Icon do a nice one in the States) and an led penlight inspection torch... Consumables wise, I would have a small parts container with a selection of fuses, screws, nails, and drywall fixing ect..I would also carry a range of glues in smaller containers, some 3 in 1 oil, PVA tape, and insulating tape... Tools I would remove include that full size framing hammer and replace with small mini/stubby hammer. The full size framer would go in a tool belt for framing work and similar. I would probably move the fish tape into a dedicated electrics tool bag as well...
@platinumhandymansolutions3 ай бұрын
These are great suggestions. I will take them all and modify this kit. Thank you so much!
@peterevans81943 ай бұрын
@@platinumhandymansolutions Glad you found them useful...In truth, these tool bags tend to evolve anyway...A few others thing I forgot to mention and I don't recall if you have are a largish flat blade screwdriver to use as a beater/pry bar ect...I think the term used is "demolition screwdriver"...it's a general tool that can be useful in a variety of situations, a radiator bleed key to remove air from your central heating radiators (if applicable) and finally any "access keys" to get in meter/water cabinets. If you ever work light commercial premises, you'll end needing a selection of these but I don't know the common types/sizes used in the States.....Good luck, and keep the videos coming!
@leehart90553 ай бұрын
Good afternoon from the Great State of Texas. Where did you get the little blue broom and dustpan?
@platinumhandymansolutions3 ай бұрын
I've had for years I think I got it at a camping store. Thank you for watching!
@jessemayra22 күн бұрын
The stud finder…I have better luck with the Chanson magnetic stud finder to locate screw and nail heads …to locate a stud
@platinumhandymansolutions21 күн бұрын
You are right, I am going to be picking one of those up. Thanks for the comment!
@trace41253 ай бұрын
You need to watch a video on how to use the circuit tracer. I had trouble at first until i realized you have to scan the entire panel once to learn then a second time to locate. Basically the first time it looks for any signal and then the second scan tells you where the strongest signal is aka the supply circuit the transmitter is plugged into. Hope that helps
@platinumhandymansolutions3 ай бұрын
I've done this, it does work on basic panels well. Thanks for the info though.
@garytaylor29143 ай бұрын
All those tools brand new, you’ve just bought them to show off. Bag is pristine, never done a job in your life fraud
@marcross31973 ай бұрын
There is not a handyman buisness. This is worse than my wife's kit. My wife's is used more.
@repodog61913 ай бұрын
A bag of tools that look to have never been used call BS can I get my view back !
@MattHmm-rq6dn3 ай бұрын
Are people not allowed to to clean ones tools after use? Mine are in fantastic shape clean as can be and I own my own business plus work 40+hours of service calls. I dislike feeding 🧌 but these are a special type. I can imagine someone who has cheap tools and a handyman who isn't likely to get to dirty doing common tasks probably takes care of his stuff. Either he can't afford expensive tools so he has to clean them so they last or he bothers to protect his livelihood with a simple wipe down. Take those comments elsewhere you troll 🧌.
@trace41253 ай бұрын
His tools arnt new they are clean. Professionals clean their tools for many reasons A) you dont look like a slob B) it shows you take pride in what you do C) cleaner tools=cleaner hands= clean walls = less clean up time= less cost= more money