Restore Old Tools: How To Tune-Up Tools and Make Them Better Than New

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by Adobe Stock/Andrzej Tokarski

Take the time to restore old tools, including how to remove rust from tools, and you will acquire an inexpensive collection worthy of the next generation.

It’s almost impossible to keep the old homestead (or apartment) together without the help of a whole gang of pricy equipment. But, if you pick up other people’s castoff tools and give ’em a bit of tender loving care, you can equip your workshop for pennies a year, and still have some tools left over for barter.

Tool Graveyards Are Great for Finding Inexpensive Tools

All you need to start your collection of inexpensive tools is a good nose for the kind of “hiding places” junk tools usually end up. And nothing will get you into those places quicker than a willingness to help clean out other folks’ attics, basements, barns, and similar graveyards of used equipment.

Not so long ago, for instance, a friend asked me to lend a hand “redding up” the garage that came with his new apartment. I did so, and was rewarded with two old axe heads and a ball-peen hammer. And, on another occasion, the bed of a newly purchased 1956 pickup produced five pairs of shears, a hacksaw frame, a keyhole saw, two cold chisels, and many other perfectly good tools that hid their glory under coats of rust and neglect. And, if you don’t mind spending a little cash, there are many unwanted but excellent tools to be found at garage sales and auctions.

  • Published on Jan 1, 1979
Tagged with: Hand Tools, restoration
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