I solved this very problem. I have two sets: MY SET and the cheapest harbor freight or pawn shop back-up ensemble of neighborhood loaners one's ever seen.
This is so painfully accurate. Probably why they stopped wood/auto shop at every school, nobody could afford to replace the tools teenage boys break on a daily basis fast enough 😂
@@smokeystriper it's like this one day I decided I kept loosing lighters so I bought this case of like 40 lighters before I got home I found 10 additional in my car then another 5 when I got home .
My neighbor, “ Can I barrow a .....” Me, “I’ll need to hold on to your driver’s license and $100 damage deposit.” Neighbor, “Hell, I can buy one for half that.” Me, “Exactly!”
Two rules...#1 NEVER loan out something you can't afford to loose...#2 ALWAYS take a pic of the person who's borrowing the tool holding the tool up with your phone so you don't forget where it's at AND you have proof they borrowed it. 👍
I worked as an apprentice pipefitter on a job for about a year. There was one guy on the crew that was notorious for "permanently borrowing" people's tools. He even got one of the foreman's tools one day, went home, sharpied his name on it, and came back the next day saying it was his tool from home. It got so bad that nobody would loan him a tool, ever. I was assigned to work with him and he asked me to "find" a tool for him (I had and still have very good borrowing cred when it comes to tools) and so I went to the guy I knew had one. I borrowed it, went to my journeyman, gave it to him, then stood there watching him work. He said that he might be a while so I could take a break. I didn't budge. He said "what, you gonna stand there for two hours?". Yes. "Don't you trust me, man?" No, I absolutely do not. I know, you know, and everyone else knows that you steal tools, so I will not budge from this spot until that tool ends up in my hand again. I'm not burning up my social cred for you. Turns out, it only took 30 minutes to get the job done. Didn't work with him again (probably at his request).
A saws all is SOOOO handy. I once froze a 5lb beef roll. I usually cut it into 1lb chunks. I went to hubby in his shop with the frozen log. He used the saws all to cut it up for me. Thank goodness he had a new blade in it. As many times as he's used my good vacuum to clean up construction debris, it was nice to use one of HIS things oddly for once
On a serious note. I used to loan tools to family and close neighbors years ago. One time I loaned a battery charger to my wife’s aunt. About 8 days later I asked where it was. I was told she loaned it out to someone else. I told the aunt I needed it. About a few days later. My car would not start. I called the aunt and told her I needed it asap. She was at work. I told her I don’t care. She had to leave work to go get it. Another time a neighbor borrowed my lawnmower and left it dirty and a empty tank. Now I just tell anyone. Home Depot is the place to go…
I once lent a 1/2" drive Snap On torque wrench to a neighbour so he could rebuild his engine in his van. When I needed it about 6 months later he swore up and down that he had returned it although I could not remember him doing so. A year and a half after that I was in his garage with his Father and I saw the familiar red box up on one of the shelves. I asked if I could have a look at it and his Dad said sure, go ahead. I took the box down and sure enough, my name was scratched into the box and engraved on the tool. His Dad said he was wondering where that had come from and when he asked his son about it he said it was his. I took it home with me and sent it out for calibration as numb nuts had not zeroed it out when he was done using it. A couple of months later he came over and wanted to borrow a feather edging sander. My answer was a simple no. He asked why and I asked if he still had my torque wrench. He said he had forgot all about and he would go and get it right away. He never came back. His Dad told me later that he spent abut 2 hours tearing the garage apart looking for it before concluding he must have lent it out to a friend but he couldn't remember who. His Father was pissed with him for being such a jerk so he didn't tell him I had retrieved it. I don't lend tools anymore to anyone except my sons. If asked to borrow a tool, I tell the person asking for a deposit equal to replacement value. I have yet to have anyone willing to give me that deposit.
Years ago when the elderly neighbor man died his family had an auction. The auctioneer actually asked my dad when he got there if he was coming to look for his tools.
I used to have to replace my tools every 3 yrs until I found two great ways to avoid this... 1.) Buddy who is horrible with tools - "Hey, can I borrow your [TOOL NAME]?" Me - "Whacha working on? I can bring [TOOL NAME] over and give you a hand." 2.) Me - "Oh, know what? Yeah, I lent that our to my father-in-law (lives 100 miles away). When I get it back I can run it up to you."
I go through this with my kids, I think they think we’re growing a snap on tree in the backyard. As a quick fix I bought a set of Pittsburgh sockets for them to use. Decent enough quality for my teens to work on their trucks but cheap enough that I’m not wanting to choke them when something is lost.
1) That’s a Hackzall not a Sawzall, and cutting summer sausage is the best use for it I’ve never thought of. 2) This video is the story of my life, both borrowing and loaning! I figure I have about 3 tool loan outs left before I have repaid my debt to karma.
That is most mechanics by the way. Having 10k of quality tools is a good way to learn to never loan them out. That socket set that didn't come back means 300-400 bucks if you can't find it.
@@john-zf1yb yes and no. Aviation has very strict tool accountability. If you loan out a tool and it never gets returned, then you are missing a tool that could very well be in an aircraft around a system where it could cause catastrophic damage.
also, in aviation, all tools are signed. so if an aircraft end up having a failure caused by a tool a mechanic left in it, they will know who it belonged to
When I lived in California, my good friend lived around the corner from me. Always calling me to borrow tools. He would return them after a week or so. One time he dropped some tools off at my house. When I went through them, there were tools that were not mine. I wonder who else he borrowed from.
2 guys I worked with years ago. 1 had the others power washer for over a year. When asked about it, he said he couldn't give it back at the time because his son was using it to do summer jobs. Months later, while he still had it, people would joke about it in front of him. With a dead ass straight face, he would say "Yeah I've still got it, he can borrow it anytime he wants".
Hi! Between you, You Betcha!, Dude Dad, and The Holderness Family, I end up watching the same videos on all the channels just to be fair. :) Also, I bought the Wisconsin re-flag t-shirt and out of ALL the clothing I own, it’s my favourite shirt!!
That is literally me and my brother in law. Not once did he ever returned any borrowed tool, when I went looking for them not one was not broken or missing pieces. How the hell did he lose a blade on a ride on mower and never noticed, break the brake handle on the chainsaw without realizing it, or bust an industrial-strength 3/4” impact wrench without hurting himself? I’ll never know. To this day, he is not allowed near my tools. And my wife agrees because he also borrowed kitchen appliances and office electronics from her with the same results.
wow BTW RhumRunner I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe. I got it in my about tab.
Asking to borrow a skilled craftsman's tools is *by far* one of the quickest ways to get a skilled craftsman to do the work _for_ you for little more than a case of beer. It's just plain easier for everyone involved.
After loaning my tools out to a neighbor who absolutely mistreats and returns tools all funky (seriously, he borrowed my shop vac when his aquarium broke and returned it smelling of fish shit) I have since stopped loaning out my tools! This video was a painful reminder! A very accurate and painful reminder!
One time 15 years ago I loaned out a $10 harbor freight grinder. Came back not working. Never loaned out another tool. That $10 lesson probably saved me hundreds over the years.
There is a mechanic's pride in lending a tool. I like having tools to help people. My problem is #2... the hunt. Anything expensive also comes with the operator... me. :)
Lived with a friend who would do this to the worst degree. Just taking tools of mine without telling me, despite having much better(my drillmaster to his DeWalt) and being completely shocked and delirious when I confront him
I've lent people books and never got them back. Even when I've reminded them to return my books. Lesson learned: Never lend anything if you want it back.
I'm fastidious about my books. I don't mangle them when I read them or wad them up. Most of them don't even have a crack in the spine. I'll loan one out. I'd like everyone to be able to talk about the stuff I'm interested in. I just demand to get them back as pristine as they were when I lent it.
Reminds me of one time when I let someone borrow a textbook for a semester. I don't mark my books in any way. Got it back, tons of underlining and markings.
We would buy at least one if not two copies of a DVD of book. One to keep. And one to lend. If we didn’t get it back we ordered another loaner. And if someone wanted something lent but hadn’t returned the other it was Ahhh how bout that last thing. And then that’s a no.
@@UnsaltedCashew38 Not everything. Just information we feel needs shared. But yes we have purchased multiple copies of some items like $1 pamphlets of the Declaration and Constitution. But books like Lab 257 or DVDs like Agenda
I can't stop watching this.. Fn funny.. this is a good one.. my buddy borrowed my angle air drill and then told my other buddy just keep it he hasn't used it for years... Got me with the old beer trick.. 🍻🤦♂️
I've only ever lent out one tool, and it took two months to get it back. Fortunately it was the hedge trimmer that hadn't been used in 16 years since before I moved halfway across the country.
I've got you beat. My grandfather borrowed a sicklemower and 2-bottom trip plow from a friend 20 years ago. My grandpa has been dead for 9 years and they are still sitting behind our shed.
Have this happen many times. Question to everyone out there: Why have we not introduced a Loan Book? Log: date, item, who and their signature WHY? Seriously think about it. True friends would be like, "No problem." Flakes would get mad and walk away empty handed.
Solve the problem at the start buy 3 or 4 extra 10mm sockets. Kits usually come with one shallow and one deep, so you should have around 5 or 6. After 10 years I still have one shallow 10mm in my tool box!
I was the lender that had to always track my stuff down. I finally put my foot down and said no. After about a year of saying no guys stopped asking to borrow.
funny I was raised to returned a borrowed item in as good or better condition than it was loaned to you. Would have expected this to be a Upper Midwest kinda thing too.
The little "what brand was it, DeWalt? No, that's Miles's" in passing is so funny. Mf already borrowed a Sawzall which evidently _isn't_ lost but still went to ask another person for theirs.
My dad has a sticker on his roll away that says "Don't ask to borrow!". Neighbor borrowed a tool when my dad wasn't home. My dad finds out one day when he needs it. My mom said, "Oh Chris borrowed that." My dad said, "You see that sticker, it doesn't mean to take without asking!" 🤔
Step 1. Take his life without asking. Step 2. "Your Honor, I would like to point out that he didn't have a sticker." Step 3. ???? Step 4. I'm going to be upfront--I don't exactly know what happens here, but to be honest it doesn't actually matter because no matter WHAT the outcome is, it's *easily* worth _never having to worry about someone "borrowing" your tools again for the rest of your life_ because they're afraid of being summarily executed.
Sawzall is a brand of reciprocating saw. The renowned power tools manufacturer Milwaukee registered the name Sawzall in 1951. It became so famous that people started calling every reciprocating saw by the name Sawzall
Before I really owned/understood tools I had a mechanic neighbor with a very cool rule: I’ll loan you a tool once. If you need to use it a second time you need to go buy your own.
After watching Charlie and Myles "building" a bar recently, I'm convinced that this is actually how far his knowledge of tools goes. FFS, I had to edit this a dozen times because I kept typing "Charles and Miley". I'm bad at names and I just found this channel, I'll get it eventually
Eyyyy Charlie you are wearing the spooner sweatshirt that you bought from my wife at timestamp 2:50. Awesome to see! Keep up the content! We got more of dem sweatshirt up der in spooner!
6th stage is when you maintain a separate set of loaner tools so you no longer have to get angry about your friends using your Snap On screw drivers to pull up their hardwood floors...
This is in the same category as "Can you walk out dog for a week or two while the wife comes out of physical-therapy rehab.?" Two and a half months later, after more hospital admissions, a stint in the ICU, some gold-bricking on the couch, and future operations planned ...still walking their dog every night at 9pm. (I did finally put an end to it, seeing that the wife could make it to their front door from the couch just fine.)
Ah, you see I am immune to this. In the first stage I don't lend him my tools because I am cynical and have little believe in 99% of the population. But if somehow I get to stage 5 with the bribe it's not going to work - I don't drink.
Thats why i have multiple tools, at least the important ones. The good ones from makita and bosch i use, and the cheap stuff i give to people who ask for an akku drill or something..
I solved this very problem. I have two sets: MY SET and the cheapest harbor freight or pawn shop back-up ensemble of neighborhood loaners one's ever seen.
Geniuous
I love this comment.
Missing 10mm 😄
@@ZGGordan always the 10mm
I just say no.
Teaching high school woodshop is like loaning your favorite tools out to your worst 90 neighbors every day
I can't like this comment enough. This is gold! XD
🤣
As a woodshop student im sorry
Confirmed.
This is so painfully accurate. Probably why they stopped wood/auto shop at every school, nobody could afford to replace the tools teenage boys break on a daily basis fast enough 😂
“The 10mm is missing”
“It was missing when I got it”
Just about the truest thing in this video
@L. Ron Hoyabembe SAVAGE, hahaha payback's a bitch ain't it :)
Always the 10mm! ROFL
@@smokeystriper it's like this one day I decided I kept loosing lighters so I bought this case of like 40 lighters before I got home I found 10 additional in my car then another 5 when I got home .
its always the 10 i found one on the side of the road
What?! The whole thing is true!
To be fair, I'm sure that 10mm sockets are an urban legend. I've never seen one.
They exist but they are the quickest to grow legs and run the hell off
Too beee fayahhhh (because letterkenny)
10 mm sockets and 6 mm allens!
The potheads all use the 10mm deep for... stuff...
The earth needed humans to make 10mm sockets and wrench's. They have been returned to the earth from every toolkit on the planet.
"What brand was it? Was it DeWalt? No, that's Miles's." Mt. Dew out my nose on that one, Charlie!
And he had all his attachments!
Like 5 pieces there.
As soon as I saw the yellow on the shelf I called bullshit on the video…….faith restored when Charlie had borrowed the DeWalt set, too😂😂😂😂
My neighbor, “ Can I barrow a .....”
Me, “I’ll need to hold on to your driver’s license and $100 damage deposit.”
Neighbor, “Hell, I can buy one for half that.”
Me, “Exactly!”
Yup. Especially at Harbor Freight!
The deposit 💵 makes it real.
@End Leftism The point is that they wont be returning it
@@MrTacoSr The point is they won’t be borrowing it.
@@bradleyweiss1089 thats what i said...
My dad taught me to never let anyone borrow your tools
The way you do it is you go help them with what they need and the tool never leaves your hands
I would much prefer to borrow a handyman with their tools than just the tool anyways.
I feel Taylor's pain. I spend way more of MY time chasing MY tools than the person who borrowed the tools probably spent using MY tool.
Two rules...#1 NEVER loan out something you can't afford to loose...#2 ALWAYS take a pic of the person who's borrowing the tool holding the tool up with your phone so you don't forget where it's at AND you have proof they borrowed it. 👍
I go where the tool goes, it comes home with me. talk about sacrifice!!!! Sometime more painful than saying NO!!!!
Smart! 😊
And how bout CHARGE EM A DEPOSIT?! You could hold onto one of their beloved possessions too!!!
Or just like, keep an inventory and just mark down who you lent it to on the sheet
Wow sometimes things can be so easy, never had the idea to just take a picture from the person with the tool, thank you 😊
I worked as an apprentice pipefitter on a job for about a year. There was one guy on the crew that was notorious for "permanently borrowing" people's tools. He even got one of the foreman's tools one day, went home, sharpied his name on it, and came back the next day saying it was his tool from home. It got so bad that nobody would loan him a tool, ever. I was assigned to work with him and he asked me to "find" a tool for him (I had and still have very good borrowing cred when it comes to tools) and so I went to the guy I knew had one. I borrowed it, went to my journeyman, gave it to him, then stood there watching him work. He said that he might be a while so I could take a break. I didn't budge. He said "what, you gonna stand there for two hours?". Yes. "Don't you trust me, man?" No, I absolutely do not. I know, you know, and everyone else knows that you steal tools, so I will not budge from this spot until that tool ends up in my hand again. I'm not burning up my social cred for you. Turns out, it only took 30 minutes to get the job done. Didn't work with him again (probably at his request).
I’ve had a friend’s tiller for more than a year but to be fair she’s had another friend’s power washer for two.
🤣🤣🤣
Can I borrow the power washer?
adog231231 Funny, as another friend asked to borrow the tiller. Hard No
My son-in-law had my pressure washer for a few years......Need to get that back over there though as it’s taking up garage space here.....
Can I borrow the tiller next spring?
A friend of mine used to have a sign that read "You can borrow my dog, but you can't borrow my tools. The dog will come back"
lol
Watching this I was nodding my head yes over and over again and then I realized... I'm an old guy now. This is old guy humor. Sh*t.
You've got to embrace it.
I'm 40 and I thought this ..... oh crap... I'm 40.
I'm 35 and get this...I hate how fast the years are starting to go by.
Hell I'm 18 and can relate to this...keep my tools under lock and key now and have a specific set I'll let people borrow on special occasions
"Old American guy". I can only relate to that kind of garage and power tool owning through American films...
The best thing to come out of covid was the collaboration between these guys.
I know! How do they and myles know eachother?
I leave my tools at work so my neighbors don't ask. I even hid the fact i work on cars for a living. To avoid the "Hey can you look at this"?.
Proctologists also hide their professional expertise for the same reason.
Nearly as bad as I see you have a pickup truck, would you help me move.... xyz... ????
Marc H Yes I’ve been a truck guy my whole life so that line is not at all new to me
Matt of The North! Lol 😂
Stugots yo theres something up with my car
'The hashbrown maker'
Brilliance, per usual.
Quoting stupid shit everyone just watched: your life.
😂😂😂
Oh, I just got that...!
A saws all is SOOOO handy. I once froze a 5lb beef roll. I usually cut it into 1lb chunks. I went to hubby in his shop with the frozen log. He used the saws all to cut it up for me. Thank goodness he had a new blade in it. As many times as he's used my good vacuum to clean up construction debris, it was nice to use one of HIS things oddly for once
I've used a drill as a mixer with a beater instead of a bit when my electric mixer gave out🤣
Good solution!
sawzall*
@@hazza2247 Ok, thank you. It was a typo...s and z are typed with the same finger, and I tend to type fast and not check myself before "sending".
@@dgeneeknapp3168 hahahah all good man
I'm so impressed with the editing to make it look like you're together!
2:20 they are together
?
3:27 and other places. Did you think that they are the same guy? 😂
On a serious note. I used to loan tools to family and close neighbors years ago. One time I loaned a battery charger to my wife’s aunt. About 8 days later I asked where it was. I was told she loaned it out to someone else. I told the aunt I needed it. About a few days later. My car would not start. I called the aunt and told her I needed it asap. She was at work. I told her I don’t care. She had to leave work to go get it. Another time a neighbor borrowed my lawnmower and left it dirty and a empty tank. Now I just tell anyone. Home Depot is the place to go…
I LOVE when you guys do these collabs. I like all 4 channels and together, AMAZING
This whole video is just pure liquid gold from start to finish! The writing is just perfect ❤️
“I know tools” also uses a wrench as a hammer 😂
Anything can be a hammer most things can be a prybar
All good mechanics do that.
All tools evolved from a hammer
There is no problem that can't be solved with the correct size of hammer. Bigger problems just need bigger hammers.
If you’re an electrician and you don’t use your linemen pliers as a hammer I don’t know what you’re doing.
2:15 Lives have been lost, _WARS have been waged_ over 10 millimeters' worth of steel alloy.
And rightly so.
I once lent a 1/2" drive Snap On torque wrench to a neighbour so he could rebuild his engine in his van. When I needed it about 6 months later he swore up and down that he had returned it although I could not remember him doing so. A year and a half after that I was in his garage with his Father and I saw the familiar red box up on one of the shelves. I asked if I could have a look at it and his Dad said sure, go ahead. I took the box down and sure enough, my name was scratched into the box and engraved on the tool. His Dad said he was wondering where that had come from and when he asked his son about it he said it was his. I took it home with me and sent it out for calibration as numb nuts had not zeroed it out when he was done using it. A couple of months later he came over and wanted to borrow a feather edging sander. My answer was a simple no. He asked why and I asked if he still had my torque wrench. He said he had forgot all about and he would go and get it right away. He never came back. His Dad told me later that he spent abut 2 hours tearing the garage apart looking for it before concluding he must have lent it out to a friend but he couldn't remember who. His Father was pissed with him for being such a jerk so he didn't tell him I had retrieved it.
I don't lend tools anymore to anyone except my sons. If asked to borrow a tool, I tell the person asking for a deposit equal to replacement value. I have yet to have anyone willing to give me that deposit.
Years ago when the elderly neighbor man died his family had an auction. The auctioneer actually asked my dad when he got there if he was coming to look for his tools.
I used to have to replace my tools every 3 yrs until I found two great ways to avoid this...
1.)
Buddy who is horrible with tools - "Hey, can I borrow your [TOOL NAME]?"
Me - "Whacha working on? I can bring [TOOL NAME] over and give you a hand."
2.)
Me - "Oh, know what? Yeah, I lent that our to my father-in-law (lives 100 miles away). When I get it back I can run it up to you."
All of my friends:
“Why buy when you can borrow?”
We take pride in our tools and when someone needs one we want them to love them as much as we do
I go through this with my kids, I think they think we’re growing a snap on tree in the backyard. As a quick fix I bought a set of Pittsburgh sockets for them to use. Decent enough quality for my teens to work on their trucks but cheap enough that I’m not wanting to choke them when something is lost.
I like this documentary, it captured being a man who owns tools perfectly.
Yeah I learned to never loan out my tools, when I started getting into tools. It was the best advice I ever got from the hardware store.
C L I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
1) That’s a Hackzall not a Sawzall, and cutting summer sausage is the best use for it I’ve never thought of. 2) This video is the story of my life, both borrowing and loaning! I figure I have about 3 tool loan outs left before I have repaid my debt to karma.
The first rule of all aviation mechanics is,,, NO TOOLS LOANED.
Why aviation mechanics so you have special or expensive tool or something?
That is most mechanics by the way. Having 10k of quality tools is a good way to learn to never loan them out. That socket set that didn't come back means 300-400 bucks if you can't find it.
@@john-zf1yb yes and no. Aviation has very strict tool accountability. If you loan out a tool and it never gets returned, then you are missing a tool that could very well be in an aircraft around a system where it could cause catastrophic damage.
also, in aviation, all tools are signed. so if an aircraft end up having a failure caused by a tool a mechanic left in it, they will know who it belonged to
When I lived in California, my good friend lived around the corner from me. Always calling me to borrow tools. He would return them after a week or so. One time he dropped some tools off at my house. When I went through them, there were tools that were not mine. I wonder who else he borrowed from.
I love both your channels on their own but when you guys team up its just the best
I just wanted to watch it in both channels for support. Much love to both of you!!!!
Bonus points for the cat crossing the street at the end 🐾🐈
2 guys I worked with years ago. 1 had the others power washer for over a year. When asked about it, he said he couldn't give it back at the time because his son was using it to do summer jobs. Months later, while he still had it, people would joke about it in front of him. With a dead ass straight face, he would say "Yeah I've still got it, he can borrow it anytime he wants".
the audacity!
Hi! Between you, You Betcha!, Dude Dad, and The Holderness Family, I end up watching the same videos on all the channels just to be fair. :) Also, I bought the Wisconsin re-flag t-shirt and out of ALL the clothing I own, it’s my favourite shirt!!
3:19 I like how there is just a cat in the background of this very intense moment. He’s just hanging
That is literally me and my brother in law. Not once did he ever returned any borrowed tool, when I went looking for them not one was not broken or missing pieces. How the hell did he lose a blade on a ride on mower and never noticed, break the brake handle on the chainsaw without realizing it, or bust an industrial-strength 3/4” impact wrench without hurting himself? I’ll never know. To this day, he is not allowed near my tools. And my wife agrees because he also borrowed kitchen appliances and office electronics from her with the same results.
wow
BTW RhumRunner I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
Asking to borrow a skilled craftsman's tools is *by far* one of the quickest ways to get a skilled craftsman to do the work _for_ you for little more than a case of beer.
It's just plain easier for everyone involved.
Do you think Charlie could've got him to cut his summer sausage? Because he looked like he cut a decently straight line to me...
@@charliegarrison9688 I don't like to comment on things like cut sausages. Reminds me too much of the '90s.
KEEP 'ER MOVIN' (ಥ﹏ಥ)
Same goes for chainsaws.
@@DarrellVermilion Roll tide
WHY have I NEVER noticed this..... Probably because of the free beer.
After loaning my tools out to a neighbor who absolutely mistreats and returns tools all funky (seriously, he borrowed my shop vac when his aquarium broke and returned it smelling of fish shit) I have since stopped loaning out my tools!
This video was a painful reminder! A very accurate and painful reminder!
OMG!!! SOMEONE HEARD MY WISH AND GRANTED IT! I MISS THE TARGET HUSBANDS! BRILLIANT! 😁💕. Also, NEVER accept the beer! It's not worth it! 😂
Especially if the beer is an open case of Coors Light...
@@brittsaunders4621 coors light is like being a boat. Damn near water.
Had to come to both channels and watch them for the views. Lol. Classic and legit way tools are loaned out.
Plot twist: At 3:17 he was staring at the cat waking around in the background. . .🐈
“Is it sticky?”
🤔😂
Ope
The video quality and editing has somehow gotten 1000 times better. Me likey
Wow Charlie is wearing a Spooner Rails shirt... that was the High School I went to 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼 GO RAILS!
Lived just down 63 in Cumberland.
One time 15 years ago I loaned out a $10 harbor freight grinder. Came back not working. Never loaned out another tool. That $10 lesson probably saved me hundreds over the years.
Great to see Penn! These videos are hysterical!
There is a mechanic's pride in lending a tool. I like having tools to help people. My problem is #2... the hunt. Anything expensive also comes with the operator... me. :)
Lived with a friend who would do this to the worst degree. Just taking tools of mine without telling me, despite having much better(my drillmaster to his DeWalt) and being completely shocked and delirious when I confront him
Your videos put sunshine in my day....keep 'er movin' !! 💖
I've lent people books and never got them back. Even when I've reminded them to return my books. Lesson learned: Never lend anything if you want it back.
I'm fastidious about my books. I don't mangle them when I read them or wad them up. Most of them don't even have a crack in the spine. I'll loan one out. I'd like everyone to be able to talk about the stuff I'm interested in. I just demand to get them back as pristine as they were when I lent it.
Reminds me of one time when I let someone borrow a textbook for a semester. I don't mark my books in any way. Got it back, tons of underlining and markings.
We would buy at least one if not two copies of a DVD of book.
One to keep. And one to lend. If we didn’t get it back we ordered another loaner.
And if someone wanted something lent but hadn’t returned the other it was Ahhh how bout that last thing. And then that’s a no.
@@bradleyweiss1089 Who buys two copies of everything? I'm assuming you don't work in a library or video store.
@@UnsaltedCashew38 Not everything. Just information we feel needs shared.
But yes we have purchased multiple copies of some items like $1 pamphlets of the Declaration and Constitution. But books like Lab 257 or DVDs like Agenda
“I thought that was gas powered” XD has me in tears
This brought back some feelings I had managed to suppress...10 years of therapy, gone in 3 minutes.
Cory I suggest watch a 13 part series called _What on earth happened_ by Ewaranon to learn that the earth is not a globe.
I got it in my about tab.
I can't stop watching this.. Fn funny.. this is a good one.. my buddy borrowed my angle air drill and then told my other buddy just keep it he hasn't used it for years... Got me with the old beer trick.. 🍻🤦♂️
What an amazing skit! Best part of my day
I've only ever lent out one tool, and it took two months to get it back.
Fortunately it was the hedge trimmer that hadn't been used in 16 years since before I moved halfway across the country.
Coors Lite will get you nothing from my garage.
yeah. No kidding. Nothing less than a single malt / barrel you betcha!
Coors lite is watered down. I rather receive spring water
Gotta be at least a suitcase of PBR or some blended scotch!
It gets thrown out of mine
Wow...real men here!
I've got you beat. My grandfather borrowed a sicklemower and 2-bottom trip plow from a friend 20 years ago. My grandpa has been dead for 9 years and they are still sitting behind our shed.
!!!!!!!! Wow
I borrowed Death's sickle in the 1270s, for 77 years.
The Black Death in Europe was the "catch up".
When he started using that Milwaukee battery pack as a hammer I literally cringed so bad. 🤣 this is so true!!
I saw this on Dude Dad's channel a year ago. I had no idea Charlie was the same Charlie until now! This is great. I'm just catching up.
I want to see him use a lathe to make hash browns now lmao
I realized long ago that there's a 75% chance that you will never see again an item loaned to a friend.
75%?! You must have some good friends. I'm lucky to get 10% and I've even run into them thinking it's theirs since they had my shit so long.
@Sam Fernandez 75% chance of never seeing a tool again means 25% of seeing a tool again.
the best line to use, "it's broken".
Have this happen many times. Question to everyone out there:
Why have we not introduced a Loan Book? Log: date, item, who and their signature
WHY?
Seriously think about it. True friends would be like, "No problem." Flakes would get mad and walk away empty handed.
There's an app for this but I forgot where it is and it's name...sigh
And then there is my father, who has a dozen shovel heads he fits with homemade handles made from tree branches every spring time
"The beginning of wisdom is to call things by their right name."
No , it is to fear the Lord thy God.
Proverbs 9:10
Solve the problem at the start buy 3 or 4 extra 10mm sockets. Kits usually come with one shallow and one deep, so you should have around 5 or 6. After 10 years I still have one shallow 10mm in my tool box!
I was the lender that had to always track my stuff down. I finally put my foot down and said no. After about a year of saying no guys stopped asking to borrow.
I’m a newer mechanic and I learned the lesson the hard way don’t lend your tools out not even to the tech in the next bay, you’ll never see em again
funny I was raised to returned a borrowed item in as good or better condition than it was loaned to you. Would have expected this to be a Upper Midwest kinda thing too.
Must be from same era.
The little "what brand was it, DeWalt? No, that's Miles's" in passing is so funny. Mf already borrowed a Sawzall which evidently _isn't_ lost but still went to ask another person for theirs.
My dad has a sticker on his roll away that says "Don't ask to borrow!". Neighbor borrowed a tool when my dad wasn't home. My dad finds out one day when he needs it. My mom said, "Oh Chris borrowed that." My dad said, "You see that sticker, it doesn't mean to take without asking!" 🤔
Step 1. Take his life without asking.
Step 2. "Your Honor, I would like to point out that he didn't have a sticker."
Step 3. ????
Step 4. I'm going to be upfront--I don't exactly know what happens here, but to be honest it doesn't actually matter because no matter WHAT the outcome is, it's *easily* worth _never having to worry about someone "borrowing" your tools again for the rest of your life_ because they're afraid of being summarily executed.
@@DarrellVermilion Normally I'd say that's a bit extreme but hey its 2020 so...
Sawzall is a brand of reciprocating saw. The renowned power tools manufacturer Milwaukee registered the name Sawzall in 1951. It became so famous that people started calling every reciprocating saw by the name Sawzall
Only milwaukee calls this a hackzall
@@TheSatan222 Yes. but these guys don't because Sawzall has become the go to name for any reciprocating saw. Cordless or not.
Literally the exact same thing happened to me. I lent out my reciprocating saw to a friend and have still not gotten it back like months later.
Before I really owned/understood tools I had a mechanic neighbor with a very cool rule: I’ll loan you a tool once. If you need to use it a second time you need to go buy your own.
Keep er movin
the acting here is so legit, better than some tv shows/movie actors
After watching Charlie and Myles "building" a bar recently, I'm convinced that this is actually how far his knowledge of tools goes.
FFS, I had to edit this a dozen times because I kept typing "Charles and Miley". I'm bad at names and I just found this channel, I'll get it eventually
3:22 the cat in the backround tho lol
The 10mm socket should be cheaper at stores.... Just because....
The bloopers would have been funnier than this video, but this video was very true. Every neighborhood/neighbor has a Charlie.
EXACTLY why I NEVER ask for anything, and why I NEVER "loan" anything out.
Eyyyy Charlie you are wearing the spooner sweatshirt that you bought from my wife at timestamp 2:50. Awesome to see! Keep up the content! We got more of dem sweatshirt up der in spooner!
6th stage is when you maintain a separate set of loaner tools so you no longer have to get angry about your friends using your Snap On screw drivers to pull up their hardwood floors...
I never lend out my tools, especially the power tools!!!! I’ll come do your project with you but you’re not walking away with my stuff
It's like the Godfather on the day of his daughters wedding. If someone gives you beer, you have to do what they ask next.
My favorite YT comedians are Charlie Berens, Myles from You Betcha, and Gus Johnson. And all three posted new videos today...It was a good day☺
I worked at a CNC machine shop. I have 3 freaking set of allen wrenches. The 3/8 is always missing.
This is in the same category as "Can you walk out dog for a week or two while the wife comes out of physical-therapy rehab.?" Two and a half months later, after more hospital admissions, a stint in the ICU, some gold-bricking on the couch, and future operations planned ...still walking their dog every night at 9pm. (I did finally put an end to it, seeing that the wife could make it to their front door from the couch just fine.)
Ah, you see I am immune to this.
In the first stage I don't lend him my tools because I am cynical and have little believe in 99% of the population.
But if somehow I get to stage 5 with the bribe it's not going to work - I don't drink.
Thats why i have multiple tools, at least the important ones. The good ones from makita and bosch i use, and the cheap stuff i give to people who ask for an akku drill or something..
Love when you all do I video together 😁
2:42 especially Charlie haha
Why do I get the feeling both Charlie and Taylor have made a special sawzall with the sausage attachment? ;-)
because when you have a sawzall it's a given that's what you use it for the other 362 days you don't need to hit pipe or demo...
That tool is a Hackzall.
Absolutely loved this collab
I briefly paused once the actual sketch was over. I'm glad I decided to watch the last ten seconds and now want that as a ringtone.