Amazing Ingenious TOOLS you can Buy Now in 2021 (Amazon) PART: 1
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- čas přidán 24. 07. 2024
- 8 Amazing Ingenious TOOLS you can buy now in 2021 (Amazon)
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00:11 ➤➤ PacTool - Gecko Gauge ☛ geni.us/dvCeBe
✔ Packtool is a kind of gauge tool designed by ‘general tools’. It is simple, easy to use and no need any technical sense. Just clamp the pair of gauge on siding and the pair of gauge keep holding the next siding until you nail it. The tool is also flexible so you can set the size according to usage. Quite simple and easy to use.
00:44 ➤➤ JOKARI Wire stripper QUADRO Plus ☛ geni.us/yRfWBl
✔If you have had enough with wiring work, this multipurpose tool will be your helping hand. Cutting - insulation stripping - twisting and crimping, four functions in any one tool, Bingo! Want color variation? Simple, remove the blue cartridge and replace with red one.
01:50 ➤➤ GaffTech GaffGun Tape Applicator ☛ geni.us/lScV
✔ This tap applicator is designed by Gafftech Gaffgun. Wire mashup on the floor or want to apply safety mark, Gaffgun is on the way to make everything perfect. Integrated core locks and other safety features promise to last longer. No matter if it is a factory, a mall, a shop or any other industrial area, this tinny walker does its best.
02:39 ➤➤ JÖST abrasives: Pipe Sanding System 2000 ☛ www.joest-abrasives.com/en/pr...
✔Jost abrasive is a pipe cleaning tool that anyone can use easily. Tighten the belt and adjust the drive machine until it is in line with the collar. Before starting to adjust the safety protection in such a way that lock of the drive belt does not strike the edge of the protection. place it around the workpiece and an electrical driving unit is ready to rotate.
03:53 ➤➤ FOOTLIFT ☛ www.foot-lift.ru/
✔This is a Russian innovation, designed in order to work on higher spots or jungle area. The assembly hardly takes 15 minutes in installation. Once it is done, you just need to start paddling and the footlift does the rest. Amazing technique and fabulous structure are able to hold up to 450 kg. Additionally, it can take you up to 14M very quickly. Footlift - the middle name of total security and 100% safety.
04:43 ➤➤ Onycho Correct ☛ geni.us/jxjYX
✔The ingrown nail applicator is applied on the nail and the hooks are inserted in the nail channel. The nail is a sensitive part of the body so it is advisable to act the process in warmer water which also soften the nail and nail channel. The treatment requires only 20 minutes during keep your leg in the water. Once the treatment is over, dry your leg. It’s time to avoid the proverb “no pain, no gain” Onycho - let’s get out of pain.
05:41 ➤➤ Roof Snake by Pactool ☛ geni.us/Au1LM
✔Roof snake is here to make your time tough work simple. The snake shape helps you insert the nail and strike it without damaging the existing course.
06:41 ➤➤ WOODPECKERS ADJUSTABLE TRACK SQUARE ☛ www.woodpeck.com//woodpeckers...
✔This brilliant adjustable woodpecker will be the perfect assistant in handling your routine cutting work. Just install the channel set the scale as per your requirement and it’s ready to go. 20, 45 or 90 degrees, whatever angles you need, this smart cutting master is adjustable at any size.
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Voice Commentary: Joe
ScriptWriter: TK Ketan
Video Editor: AMJATH KHAN
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Guys,
Let us know about the feedback of this video !!!!
What kind of bizarre voice-over/narration was that..??
It's like they were reading a badly translated description.. many generally used and required words were missing from most sentences..
if it's at all possible, get someone who's first language is English to read the description, so they can advise you on the correct word usage.
@@genelomas332 Pretty hilarious: "the treatment requires only 20 minutes during keep your leg in the water"
"once the treatment is over, dry your leg" (meaning foot)
". . . so it is advisable to act the process in warmer water"
"Cut an accurate angle is now easy like never before"
@@3maisons Pretty fucking tragic actually..
The guy even has a pretty good American accent..
Which leads me to wonder, is this a computer generated voice from whatever non-english speaking country the maker of this video is from which was fed a badly translated description, or was a fluently speaking American guy directed to read -verbatim- the supplied script..?
I know that had I been asked to read this script, I would have suggested the syntax and grammar corrections this scrip so badly needs..
3maisons 0
Gene Lomas was
Used pump jacks for years, down is always fun.
Well, not ALWAYS, but the occasional 3' sudden drop is kind of a trip. But that was only with certain jacks. They're cheap enough so that you can toss the ones that slip again and again, and resist your attempts to adjust them.
@@grizzlygrizzle Man, that drop always scared the hell outta me when I was younger. Always felt like you were going to slip right to the ground. I now realize the most dangerous part was the old, weathered, beat up 2x4s used for the posts. LONG LIVE ALUMAPOLES!
@@rickjames8317 -- The drops were caused by the pump jacks, not the posts. Sure, you need to inspect the posts to make sure that they're still good, but the danger there is snapping, not dropping. Some of the jacks just seemed to have a slightly "off" geometry that would slide. But they weren't very expensive, so if I couldn't adjust them so they would work, I'd take them out of service and save them for parts. I still like the wooden poles and the standard pump jacks, all in all. It's a cost-benefit thing.
The pump backs are awesome. Have used them for 30 years. Works great for siding,soffit work
Love Chinglish adverts? Well these are the 5 of the top durable mechanisms that is improving your life!
Yep we used those lifts aka pump jacks for years
I WANT THAT PIPE SANDER !!!
I would have absolutely no use for it but damn sure looks convenient.Lol
LOL
We know what pipe you sand.
For me, it would "conveniently" take up space in my tool box. I don't need that kind of convenience, but I'm sure there are some people who have a use for it.
My God man! Just wrap a length of emery cloth around it and go. Just another useless reinvented mouse trap. I mean money trap.
Pump Jack's have been around for a really really long time
Pump jacks... First used them building houses with my father when I was 12 in 1963...56 years ago... You could buy them then - did not have to wait until 2019 as the title says
Get the hell out of here! I was building the Turn of River Lodge in Killington Vermont with My Father in 1963 when I was 12. Yep! We used pump jacks also! Porsche 924? Click on Videos at the top of my channel.
@Rick Garvin We used to use them installing asbestos shingles... times have changed!
Me too. They worked great on the four story. Until I tried to oil the 2x4s to preserve them. Big mistake.
Yep there used to be a salesman that would go around to different job sites and sell them out of his car. I used them for siding houses.
Started in denver in late 60,s. Moved to salt lake in 73 started up another siding business. Guess who showed up at my new job. Same guy. He remembered me.. do you remember the picture of the car sticking into the side of the second story wall they used pump jack to support back of car. Sold me. How bout when they get stuck and you use the hammer butt and claw to jam them free and they drop about six feet. Many scary long days walkin the plank.
Hats off to you guys I trim palm trees and saw something like that for tree climbers but I don’t think I have the balls to trust something mechanical like that when I’m 40 ft in the air
This guy sounds like the manual for the desk I got from Amazon
i bought gecko gauges about 4 years ago to put hardie plank on my house... did it myself, never done it before and after you get the first course done, it just whizzed along - so two thumbs up on the gauges. but not new.
yeah, those things have been around for years.
I need to do a whole lot of re-siding on my home now and it looks like those little gadgets just might be my first purchase. Thanks for your experience share
@@1959jimbob you can probably rent them from whomever you rent your scaffold from. that's how i did it. good luck!
Jokari has been around since the 1950's in Germany. As an apprentice, every electrician had one in his tool box. But the US made Stripax was far superior and much more expensive.
You featured some ingenious devices and tools, each of which will enable work to be carried out easier, faster and with much less energy and waste.
The medical aid was excellent in it's own right as it enables people to care for themselves and to reduce their discomfort and pain.
Thank you for highlighting these remarkable items.
Save the best for last! Not really, but just what I could use. Definitely
I love how this narrated like the English translations on Chinese products...
100% agree, Yet has no accent at all.
It's like he was told to stick to the script or billed per word.
@@heyimamaker , It may be a computer generated voice. I wish these TY channels would hire real human voice-over artists who have brains and can help edit the script to be proper English.
Gene Dameier they’d be better off throwing the original language text into Google Translate and then porting straight into the synthetic voice
This.
@@genedameier8746 due to the nuances this is a real person not a computer generated voice in this particular case!
I used pump jacks when I built my house 40 years ago. Cutting edge technology for who the caveman.
Right wooden poles 30-40 years ago. Its all aluminum poles since then. I have been using those geko gauges for 15 years
"Russian Invention"? WTF? Those pump jacks have been around for at least 50 years. I still have a set though they are no longer allowed by the local building gestapo.
Haha yea the pump jacks made of wood are pretty goofy and siding isnt that hard i never used those gecko spacer thingys
101@@raiftadehara9218
i was about to wright the same thing,
Да, реально полезные вещи! Нифига не понимаю по английски, но и так всё понятно, интересно почему дизлайки ставят?
Love that Russian scaffold jacking system,sure beats setting up the metal type, especially when you are alone. Can't seem to find who sells them.
They have been around for 90 years. Don't bother looking for "foot lifts". There is nothing new or Russian about them. They're called "pump jacks" and can be purchased at Home Depot, Lowes and on Amazon.
To find out who keeps stealing your lunch in the break room cafeteria, buy the ingrown toenail thingy to start getting answers!
Haha.
And don’t forget about, “What are your intentions for my daughter?”
Better yet, just cut off the tip of that ingrown toenail and mix it into a lunch you Want to get stolen and see the thief get his/her just desserts!!
5:13 The treatment requires only 20 minutes during keep your leg in the water
i dont mean to be offtopic but does any of you know a trick to get back into an Instagram account..?
I stupidly lost the account password. I would love any help you can offer me!
The device to correct ingrown toenails (04:54) looks like it's a spinoff from Cold War era "interrogation technology".
yea that definitely hurts but if you think about it, there is probably no way to correct it without pain since it is bonded to the flesh. the question is, will the nail stay like that once it has been bent out?
I thought the same exact thing
ever he is just commenting that it looks very similar to an old time torture device!
I was thinking A Clockwork Orange.
The really cool thing is that it is a dual-purpose device: when you're not using it for correcting ingrown toenails, you can use it to pull steering wheels and flywheels from your miniature cars!
Considering #4 on your list, over 40 years ago I was using these to hang steel siding. Back then they were called "Pump Jacks". You should try and look them up.
yep
#7 (JOKARI Wire stripper) I had one as a kid.
I'm 51.
Gecko Gauge...
Made a couple of these decades ago when I had to put up long lengths of clapboard by myself.
If only I had patented my idea.
They wont sell very many of those things.
Jokaro Wire stripper. Still leaving bits of insulating plastic all over the floor.
The voice over dude read this straight from China script VERBATIM!!!
Sounds like it... Very odd.
Maybe it's text to speech software.
Google Translate?
Dude, I just came here to say the same thing...hilarious!
Ya pump jacks, that's how I was taught to do siding and all the rest, or we would build are own
The foot lift has been around for decades in the U.S. under the name of "Pump Jack" . Available at "Home Depot".
we used them back in the 80's....nothing new
ME GUSTARIA QUE TAMBIEN FUERA EN ESPAÑOL ES MARRAVILLOSO TODO LO QUE SACAIS O HACEIS DE ANTEMANO MUCHAS GRACIAS POR ENSEÑARNOS A LOS NEOFITOS QUE NO TENEMOS NI IDEA SEGUIR HACIENDOLO GRACIAS.
love th inventions but the one at 4:15 I was using back in 1991.
I bought and used a 'foot lift' 25 years ago (were called pump jacks then). While it worked, it's not as easy, nor is it as fast as advertised. 2 ladders, ladder jacks, and aluminum scaffolding is much faster.
I also used the 'roof snake'. Another tool that doesn't work as well as advertised.
Just remember, unless it's really new... it can't be that great if EVERYONE isn't using it.
Yeah I'm all over that toenail pulling device, it will come in handy for getting information out of suspects...
LMAO!
Lol
You should feature a cedar-shake remover tool also since they're very unique and most people have no idea that they make one
A shingle thief? Fabulous tool for siding repairs. Dasco makes one they call a "shingle ripper," but it's too thick, and unnecessarily so. I had one back in the day that was thinner and didn't disrupt the neighboring shingles as much. My daughter's house needs lots of shingles repaired, so I'm going to have a metal fabricator make me one that's thinner.
Pump jacks especially that kind have been around 100 years
I was using stodoy instructions to make it and I did it already :)
That toe nail stretching tool was hilarious.
Jokari wire stripper is awesome tool :)
I just seen something similar to the foot step that is used to connect two 4/4 beams together to make them longer. The beams were used to hold up a roof while the concrete base was being broken up and replaced until the porch columns can then be reinserted.
Im not even looking at the price of the woodpecker tool!! They are sooooo proud of their products!!
I love the roof snake
A shingle thief is also a good tool, for removing bad shingles before you try to install new ones. Especially useful for cedar sidewall shingles.
This video is such amazing and informative in it's function and presentation.
Been using Pump Jacks Or as you say "russian foot lift"For 26 years!!!
That's what I was thinking. That's not new lol people have been using those for decades lol
@@jcraig89 I know for a fact at least since the early 60's
at 4:00 metal pump jacks have been around for ad least forty years.
Even longer than that. I was using old rusty ones back in the mid-70s.
I'm not an expert in the English language but these descriptions were painful to listen to.
Nathan Nerling I know right? Sounds like a first language English speaker too. Script must be shit
Don't know what you mean, perfect chinglish.
pump jacks, how ingenious. ive been using these since the 80s
ive seen this "roof snake" years ago too. forget what name it was under then, but still just as uninterested.
The engrish is strong with this one.
I have that toe contraption, I have tried to use it. But you need someone to help you.
I'm sure it works but can be really frustrating!!!
I bought pump jacks back in 1968. Fact
I used to have alot tools that i wanted. Now days i only have the tools i need.
Yes, I am a believer that too many tools can be cumbersome.
If you intend to use 'foot lift' aka- pump jacks, change into some Depends because they will drop you 20' before catching before you can yell 'OH SH#T!'
Used them every day for years on a siding crew, and experienced maybe about 10 or 15 such drops, and they stopped at around 3 feet or just a bit more than that. You have to let go of the spring loaded release when they drop, but that comes intuitively. If you experienced a 20' drop, I think you were doing something really f'd up.
Pump jacks have been around for fifty years.
Man, this narrator is like Ron Burgundy. He reads the Engrish exactly as it is on the copy
I know, what the hell lmao. He seems to have a perfectly regular american accent.
I'm pleased to learn that I have two of these tools already.
And the JÖST abrasives, I will go shopping for it asap.
Thanks for sharing these highly interesting tools.
Like & Sub
Yeah I was just thinking maybe I may have too much crap having tools In this video lmao
Tiny wheel puller for ingrown toe nails,
hahahah
And it’s only a small modification to the torture devices used in Chinese prisons.
@@ebred76 Why do people have those nasty nails in first place?
Johnny Rotten , from years of hard work and having to have your feet cooped up inside hot and sweaty work boots. A perfect breeding ground for fungus and bacteria unfortunately.
Number 4 are otherwise known as pump jacks and they have been around for many many years. I have used them many times. The only problem is you can't use them on any job site here in the US, legally anyway. They are on OSHA's list of banned tools and you will get fined if OSHA shows up on your job while someone is using them. Just like pinning the guard on your circular saw.
Brilliant tool that wire crimping tool 👍👍
Yeah that was the best.
dont forget people " so tight your seatbelt" its gna be a top 8 on a top 5 channel
The narrator is clearly a native English speaker. He really should've been like, "Hey guys, I can correct this on the fly," instead of just reading the Google Translated version they gave him.
Russian foot lift? I usually just call mine aluma poles. Those guys are kicking it old school with the steal and double 2x4s.
Andrew Card lol right... however I still use my wood pump jacks on low boxing
I use to have a set of the aluminum I beam type with the 20' long scaffold I used for running siding. I've owned and used both types but there is a lot to be said about working off of a 20' scaffold as opposed to a 12' 2X12 plank.
This dude has the best chinglish I've ever heard!
Probably a computer generated voice "reading" English written and translated by a Chinese Ad Agency.
@@genedameier8746No....you can tell it's an ACTUAL person....speakie ingleesh badlee
"...and no need technical sense." Good english.
That "nail gadget" looks like some medieval torture invention 😜😁
Number 4 has been around for 50 years, it is far from new
in what country is a pump jack a new tool? I was using them in the 1980s and in the 1990s we had aluma-poles
Yes they have been around even longer than that..even all the way back to at least the early 60's
I have one of those style wire strippers (where it kind of rips the insulation off) and i can not get it to work right at all...
I used pump jacks decades ago, Hoistma (sp?) was the manufacturer. Copied by others. The longest poles I used were 42 ft. Scared to death but I was a outside trim subcontractor, had to be done. I never let an employee get on them. OSHA would have a cowif they ever saw an employee on one of those death traps.
Pump Jacks have been around for 50years. 🙄🤫
4 = Top
It looks like a sheetrock nail hammer. The head is rounded so that it puts a small dimple for filling with drywall mud. A roofing hatchet has a hole for a bolt to gauge your next shingle height. There was a guy who could roof a house by himself in one day. He used a regular hammer.
OK, how many squares?
@@zenbooter That was a long time ago. The houses were 2,000-3,000 sq ft two stories with garages.
We called them lath Hammers in my day, as you said hammer designed to create a dimple when plastering over said nail before screw's were used to put up plasterboard
I'm really confused I hope I can get to sleep instead of thinking about all this stuff. Goodnight.
Are those pump-jacks a Russian invention? We had it in the US for decades.
If my toe looked like that i would have it amputated.
Cut a V in the midpoint of the nail, Nail will grow toward center instead of into your skin
Boo hoo
WOW !!!!
Nice tool for the Hardie Plank but installer was using roofing nails which is a huge mistake. I made the same mistake when I installed Hardie. Needs to be screwed for proper installation. Had to go back and redo it because the wind will get under it and pull out the roofing nails.
R Hokie siding nails are longer than roofing nails and screws are a bad idea too much pressure and the hardy will crack but hey its your house
Too bad that Woodpecker tool at the end only works with the Festool $700+ track saw. It’s be great if it worked with my Skilsaw.
5:41 I really need that tool so I can avoid damaging the existing corpse!
Footlifts 4:04 "fifteen minutes of installation" plus a couple of hours or more to transport, build, and erect and properly stabilize (by nailing 2x4 braces through the existing shingles to the roof rafters) the vertical 4x4s or columns made out of 2x4's separated by a 1/2-inch spacer. These vertical members have to be more than 30-feet long (for a two storey house) and properly planted on the ground to prevent slipping and penetration into the ground.
Handling all of this will take a lot of time and a truck to haul 30-foot-long 4x4's if 4x4s are chosen.
I wonder of that toe nail will go back to it's previous ingrown shape a couple of days later, or is is permanent.
I think it may work if you keep doing it and and don't cut the nail at the corners. Just cut straight across as it grows.
You put shims in it till it grows right
@@johngnipper1454 Or go to my dentist and ask her to put braces on my toenail.
Jest cut a v in the center of the nail and never worry about ingrown nails again. If you you have a ingrown nail it doesn't matter how bad it is do this and it will be gone overnight.
yo that gaffgun is on the way to make *everything perfect* 2:20
Awesome tools! Glad I found your videos.
I love this archeological chanels. :)
I had no idea the different color ferrules were for color variation, I had always used different colors for different wire sizes....🤷♂️
4:40
yeah totally going to not fall off
Love the American chinglish!
Number 4 has been around forever. We call them "pump jacks" here in the States.
Foot lift, LOL. This is a pump jack and has been in use in the US I believe since before the early 1980's.
Early 60's at least...maybe longer than that but I know for sure at least that long!
Foot lift--nothing new about those. I used them 50 years ago to put on aluminum siding.
That toenail thing belongs in the Clockwork Orange movie.
NOTE*** The Roof snake will not help you put on your shingle correctly. Those bonds aren't even close.
The "Foot Jack", AKA Pump Jack has been around for more than 40 years
This s*** must be clickbait because I was going to say the same thing these college yippee yentas have no clue about the world around them I wonder if they know how to get down if the bottom of it gets stuck
what you call foot lifts are called Pole jacks in America, I've been using them for 47 years.
is it safe bro,i am considering to buy this,i work alone in the house could be used by one person or it needs 2 of them to keep pushing the pedals?
Very good 👍🏻
We used pump jacks in the 1960s
"Tinny Walker" lol
i watch these for the music
I used pump jacks for over 50 years but never with a board we always used scaffold plank. Maybe the weaker board is the invention.
Same video 3 years in a row. Now that's efficiency! I wonder what tools I can buy in 2022... Wait, I will watch the video again to not find out!
wide concrete and paper siding(hardi-plank) is not good enough to blind nail, you can get away with it if you use narrow hardi-plank with 4 1/4 to the weather blind nailing and face nail the joints. in low wind areas .
I've put many Lin ft of 81/4 with 7 in face Hardy plank siding on and always blind nailed it, you don't get much windier than FL
I used the gecko gauges to side my house. Indispensable!
As long as you're doing horizontal board siding. Useless for shingles, and I fear that it would cause some tolerance build up, especially on taller houses. I'm more old school, and prefer to plan the courses of siding so that they hit the windows in the right places to facilitate flashing, and then make a storey pole to transfer the marks, using the soffits as a known-level reference.
Siding staging brackets have been around for 40 years...this channel must be sponsored by China
FYI- Chinese never use siding......
I was using those pump jacks siding houses in Ohio 45 years ago. Chump.
Can't tell you how many times I saw my brother inlaw almost get busted up when those death trap's slipped.
Which thing are you talking aboit?
They only slip if you release them with the pump in the down position.