First of all, I absolutely love that this lady has put her video on youtube. There are so many great furniture frames out there that are finding their way to the dumps when they could easily last for another 75 to 100 years if taken proper care of.
Second, I commend this lady for wearing eye protection while working on furniture.
Now, for those of you not in the good ol' US of A, "nit picking" means: Minute, trivial, unnecessary, and unjustified criticism or faultfinding.
At about 30 seconds into this video, she says, "It's really important that you use your tools in the way that they are designed."
What she is doing is hammering a staple puller with a pair of pliers. She then explains how you need to make sure you are holding the staple puller in your non dominant hand and the pliers in your dominate hand.
But what about people who are ambisinistrous?
So, here's a few quotes:
Penn State Environmental Health and Safety: Never use pliers as a hammer or hammer on the handles. Such abuse is likely to result in cracks or breaks.
Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety: Do not use pliers as a hammer.
Stanley: Do not use pliers as a hammer, screwdriver or pry bar.
MasterCraft: Never use pliers as a hammer or hammer on the handles. They will crack or break.
Graybar: Never use pliers as a hammer or hammer on the handles. They will crack or break.
Here's the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImFLwk2abM0
So, what do you think? Sexist, nit picking, or am I right on!
gene
The right tool for the right job springs to mind...........er um that would be a mallet then.
Thanks for sharing that gene it made me chuckle a little at the end with the strap line "upholstery like a professional".
what tool abuse do you get in lesson 2?
IVe got a nice little plastic mallet I'd use
funny on the non dominate hand for the remover there.
I'm a lefty writing, painting a widow sash. sissors go in My right hand just like a hammer or baseball bat and a catchng MIT I catch better righty So baseball was out. I can't really mix them up abidextousl the hammer is always righty. So I'd use the staple pulled in my dominate left hand and mallet righty
I'd raher have a good hand on the sharp
tool. Thigh my right hand is my stronger hand for the sissors and in had wresle righty along with a hammer
so I'd say Not nit nitpickey
I gueeseim just odd
On staples I just man handle them out with my staple puller. With tacks I whack my staple puller with my tack hammer turned sideways. Probably not an OSHA approved method.
I can see what she's doing. She hits the puller with her pliers and if the staple doesn't come out she can pull it with the pliers without having to grab another tool.
Don't know if your being sexist but if you are you picked the wrong shop to pick on. Go to her web site (very cool) you'll see all the employes are female.
http://spruceaustin.com/
I use a pair of tile nippers that I modified for pulling staples. I use it in conjunction with a Berry's staple remover. And yes, I use the tile nippers to hammer the Berry's with sometimes. I guess that I'm violating all kinds of international laws. :D
Have to agree with the OP, if you are trying to teach someone you should at very least show them the correct way and the correct tools.In this case she should have been using a ripper chisel and mallet and when removing tacks always go with the grain of the timber.I would have got a wack round the ear as apprentice if I did it her way.....
Gene, would you have had the same criticism if a man made the same video with the same mistakes? If so then you are not sexist.
On the other hand, that you brought sexism into it at all implies that you think maybe she is doing it wrong because she's a girl? I dunno...girls, what do you think??
Quote from: sofadoc on May 08, 2011, 10:33:55 am
I use a pair of tile nippers that I modified for pulling staples. I use it in conjunction with a Berry's staple remover. And yes, I use the tile nippers to hammer the Berry's with sometimes. I guess that I'm violating all kinds of international laws. :D
:o ;D
If I'm honest.............well who doesn't bang the odd staple down with the head of the gun or use a regulator for picking out hard to get at staples. Saying that though " Striking Metal on Wood can never be good" ;). I find the berry remover has been rendered less useful due to the poor quality of staple wire, hardwood under 8% moisture just grips them too well and the staples (71 series) snap all to often, I like using the spade type more often on show wood chairs these days. What are most of your frames made from? Ours tend to be Beech, do you get that in the states?
Kody,I have to admit your right her web site is pretty cool with some very "on trend" looking furniture scattered through there.
By using the pliers as a hammer, she doesn't have to lay a hammer, or mallet down in order to pick up the pliers to pull out a protruding staple.
If the only harm in using pliers to hammer with is that you shorten the life of the tool, big deal.
I have to say that when doing something of this nature I LOVE my fencing pliers! They are a hammer, a puller, a wire cutter and are useful for various other operations! Just add a staple
"loosener" and you have it made.
Boy are you sexist Gene. ;D
I guess my biggest question is not her using pliers as a hammer but why did her husband let her out of the
kitchen in the first place ? The only time a woman should be let out of the kitchen is to bring you the paper or a cold drink or to run the vacuum sweeper or do the laundry. :o 8)
( Hides under his cutting table )
All kidding aside, I have found it easier to use a staple puller and mallet. But if she can do it with pliers, more power to her. I cannot say anything as I have been known to use tools improperly or for a job they were not designed for.
You should have seen the day I trimmed the hedges with my push mower ? :)
Chris
I try to use my diagonal pliers as a hammer with the staple puller all the time to save a step but it never works out. I use a rubber mallet much quieter. I am generally a use the tool for it purpose ONLY kin of a guy but sometimes I slip. Maybe that's why it doesn't work.
Quote from: Mojo on May 08, 2011, 01:11:47 pm
Boy are you sexist Gene. ;D
You should have seen the day I trimmed the hedges with my push mower ? :)
Chris
my dad once hit a flower or a shun he shouldn't have and when my mother saw he never got his hands on the mower again. He had it all
planned. ;)
Guess I've been doing it wrong for the past 6 years :o I've never hit my staple puller with anything. I just shove it under the staple and pry.
June
"Let the tool do the work", "Use as intended", sounds good, as long as you know what the tool is intended for.
As for being sexiest, some men don't like to hear anything from a woman about certain subjects, women sports castors come to mind. Even if they are on point, informative,very insightful, a lot of men don't want their sports news being delivered by a woman.
I got one here y'all'all;
A man and son are in terrible car accident, the man is airlifted to one local hospital, the boy to another. The doctors begin operating on the man immediately. They take the boy into the operating room to operate, when the doctor looks down, and says "I cannot operate on this boy, this is my son."
How could this be? See below;
The Doctor is the boy's Mom
Several of my running buddies are Airline pilots. During a discussion I asked them what they thought of female pilots. All of them said " A woman can fly a plane better then a man can because they fly smoothly due to having an amazing feel of the controls where a man horses a plane around the air ".
I always listen and have learned a lot from our female members here. I consider them exceptional at what they do. If June or Bobbin, Suzi, Cheryl or whomever posts a " How to " or advice, I take it to heart and accept it just as if it was coming from a man. I think in some cases they are better then us men at stitching.
But then again, the reason why a womans feet are smaller then men's is so then can get closer to the sink when doing dishes. ;D
I do know that if giving birth was a mans job there would be no new babies. One guy would tell the rest of us about the experience and we would all run down and have our tubes tied. :P
But I still enjoy harassing the ladies on here and thankfully they all have a sense of humor. Otherwise, Gene, Big John and myself would have been scalped a long time ago.
:)
Chris
I dont' think sexism has anything to do with it... I think the only question here is whether this info is correct for an instructional video??? Keep in mind it's for a novice to learn on. So if I were explaining this to a novice I think I would recommend a mallot. plain and simple.
Infomation is either correct or incorrect, should it matter who and how it's delivered??
QuoteI try to use my diagonal pliers as a hammer with the staple puller all the time to save a step but it never works out.
That's how I was taught and what I find the fastest. I generally use the berry instead the osborne she was using but both work the same. A little snap of the wrist once the point is driven under the staple will often poop them right out ,otherwise the one side will come up so you can grab it with the side cutters and remove it. This approach automatically puts the beating device in your dominant hand (ready for step two) and the extractor (which ever one you choose) in the hand you mind least whacking when you miss.
I have no issue (despite those warnings) about hammering that hard with a pair of side cutters.I would not try to drive a 6" pole barn nail that way mind you. The only down side I see is that repeatedly tapping your side cutters can magnetize them. Then you're having to pull or shake the staples off all the time.