Ottawa Citizen

BUYING BETTER TOOLS WILL USUALLY SAVE YOU MONEY IN LONG RUN

- STEVE MAXWELL Steve Maxwell has never regretted buying good tools, but he has made mistakes buying cheap ones. Visit him online at BaileyLine­Road.com and join 32,000+ people who get his email newsletter every Saturday morning.

Do you have aspiration­s to grow in your ability to build and fix things? If you do then I want to warn you about a sneaky danger that can short-circuit your success. I call it the “good-enough” attitude when it comes to tool selection, and I see this pitfall repeating itself with surprising frequency. Here's how the dynamic unfolds ...

Let's say you feel an urge to repair and improve your home. You can't do much without tools, so you start looking at, say, a hand-held circular saw, a cordless drill or perhaps a reciprocat­ing saw. You feel like an impostor walking down the tool aisle and this sense of inadequacy can easily turn into tool choices that will hold you back in the future. “I'm not a profession­al,” you say to yourself or perhaps the store clerk helping you. “I just need something basic.”

This belief may be true, but not for most people that I see. If you feel the desire to grow in practical competence, and especially if you feel a passion for working with your hands and the thrill of creating things, then you're making a mistake with the “I'm not a profession­al” mindset. And this brings me to the most important tool advice I can give you.

If you're interested in more than just changing light bulbs and hanging pictures in your home, always buy tools for future needs, not current ones. The trick, as a beginner, is that you don't really know what your future needs will be. This leads to the tendency to under-buy, and though this is not usually an issue right away, under-buying will hold you back in the progress you aim for. Let me give you a specific example from my own life.

One of the first power tools I bought was a corded jigsaw. I was 18 years old at the time, and price was a vital considerat­ion as I stood in the Canadian Tire tool aisle with a small wad of hardearned grass-cutting money in my pocket. I ended up choosing an economy model because “I'm not a profession­al.” Within a year that jigsaw was dead, with the $50 or $60 I paid for it going up in acrid smoke as the motor windings burned while I cut some one-inch thick oak. Not only was the cut bad quality, but the saw was now useless. Sure, that cheap jigsaw was definitely up to the light jobs I had in mind for it at the time I bought the thing, but I failed to realize that my expectatio­ns were a moving target. When I saw my mistake and got brave enough to spend an appropriat­e amount of money on a jigsaw, I chose a Bosch model that cost $200 — more than twice what I paid for the econo model. That Bosch is still working perfectly today, 40 years later, after cutting miles and miles of the same kind of stuff that the cheapo could not handle five feet of. Which choice makes the most financial sense?

Milwaukee is a premium power tool brand that has been marketed mostly to profession­als ever since the brand was modernized beginning in the late 1990s.

And while this company has not spent much time marketing to non-profession­als so far, you shouldn't let that get in your way. It's one of a handful of profession­al tool brands that actually make a lot of sense for non-profession­als who aim for excellence and skills developmen­t over the long haul. Visit baileyline­road.com/42959 for a video tour of some profession­al-grade tools that I find useful in my shop even though I don't use all of them profession­ally.

 ?? ROBERT MAXWELL ?? A good quality cordless wrench can last for years, making the initial investment worth every penny.
ROBERT MAXWELL A good quality cordless wrench can last for years, making the initial investment worth every penny.
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