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Default The Perfect Screwdriver Rack (Long)

It's been years since I visited this group, but I found it again
during a google search and looked in... Still a wonderful group! I
decided to post a rather personal letter I wrote to my mother (she'll
be 90 in October,) about a recent project of mine. Since this is a
personal letter to my mother, a little background. My father died in
'98, and we often didn't get along. "Grampa and Gramma" were my
mother's parents... my father's parents died before I was born. "CDM"
were Grampa's initials. My apologies for the LENGTH of this thing,
but I felt some in here might appreciate it, and maybe identify with
it...


Hi Mom, The other day, I finished building a special screwdriver
rack. It's a long story, and I can only figure out how to tell it in
several disconnected episodes, so bear with me... Or maybe humor
me...

May 17th, 2010
I picked up an old Kodak Enlarging Camera off ebay. Its a
darkroom type thing built early in the last century to make
enlargements. Unlike most modern enlargers, it looks more like a head-
on collision between two old folding plate cameras... Two sets of
maroon bellows connected at their smaller ends with a lens board in
between. The negative goes on one end, the printing paper on the
other, and by moving the various sliding parts you can choose a size
for your picture and focus it in. You don't see many of these...
Anyway, it came at a decent price of 56 bucks, probably because it was
filthy and looked pretty awful in the pictures.
Once it arrived, it fortunately proved to be pretty
restorable... the first step though, was to take it apart. A few
pieces of wood needed gluing, ALL the wood needed cleaning and
polishing, the leather needed treating, the bellows were folded wrong,
and most of all, the 25 or 30 various nickel plated fittings were
pretty heavily oxidized... they needed a soak in vinegar before
polishing with Simichrome. It was during my efforts to take it apart
that this story, or at least the most recent part of it, began. They
didn't used to make all wood screws like they do now. The slots were
often more narrow, and modern screwdrivers just don't seem to fit. My
little sets of small modern screwdrivers are fine, and usually work
very well on old shutters and such, but for slightly rough screws set
into century old hardwood, they just don't fit, and the tiny handles
make it difficult to apply enough "omph." I found myself relying on
one old very small wooden handled screwdriver of unknown origin. Even
where it didn't really fit, it fit better than my more modern
screwdrivers, and the thicker handle allowed more leverage and
control. Once I got the old thing back together, I was happy with the
results, and I got to thinking about getting more of those old, small,
wooden handled screwdrivers.
Again, I prowled ebay. Tool collectors tend to be a serious
bunch, but dinky little screwdrivers evidently aren't what they're
interested in. More often than not, I put in the only bid, and soon
had a pretty good accumulation of the things. In one case, I got ten
of them for eight dollars and change. I've used them on a couple more
century old cameras since then, and I've wondered why I didn't get
more of them a long time ago. They're also kind of fun to look at...
out of maybe fifteen of the things, no two handles are the same. I
got to thinking they'd look good lined up on a little rack mounted
above my desk-workbench thing in my little room in the basement, and
it would also be very convenient. Walnut would look nice... But
getting a small piece of walnut to make what I decided should be a
seventeen and a quarter inch long rack turned out to me more difficult
than I'd anticipated. I'm sure there are lumber yards offering such
things, but in your typical small town lumberyard, there just isn't
much call. Sam, who works out back of Rasmussen Lumber here, said he
knew of a guy that said he had some around, but he couldn't remember
who it was... I had one piece of walnut that might work, but it was
special, and I didn't really want to cut it up....

November 27-28 1968
We went up to Gramma and Grampa's in Wayne for Thanksgiving. Dad
had an old single shot Wesson carbine with a chunk broken out of the
stock up by the receiver, and he brought it along to see if it could
be fixed with help from Grampa. The first night, Thanksgiving Eve,
Grampa came up with a piece of walnut, about two feet long and roughly
an inch and quarter square. Using a coping saw, we cut an odd shaped
piece out of one end to roughly fit the missing piece, filed around on
it a bit, and glued and clamped it into place. Grampa, of course, was
the carpenter, and had the tools and knew how to use them. Dad was
pretty good at such things too, and also served as chief
perfectionist. I filled the position as gopher, etc. After the glue
had set overnight, we shaped it down to fit on Thanksgiving day. It
came out very well... almost undetectable. I remember Dad saying that
the walnut was just soft enough to mold together a bit under pressure.
As an aside, while all this was going on, I remember seeing
Grampa's old Brownie box camera on a shelf in the basement, and Grampa
saw me admiring it. It was a very early Brownie, and since I'd been
collecting cameras for maybe a year, Grampa gave it to me. At the
same time, he gave Lyle an old Emerson Radio, which I believe probably
led to an interest and a career in broadcasting... but this is all
another story.
Anyway, that broken rifle stock was the first and only project
that Grampa, Dad, and I worked on together. It's a memory I treasure.

Late 1975 or '76
Not long after Grampa passed away, I was visiting Gramma in
Wayne. She suggested I take any tools I wanted out of the shop, and I
went down and looked around... Grampa had some wonderful old tools,
and after picking out his Stanley #45 Multiplane with it's box of
cutters and a few other things, I saw that piece of walnut that was
left over from fixing Dad's old rifle laying in his scrap wood box!
It was easy to recognize with the distinctly whittled away end where
we'd cut out the odd shaped piece to fit the broken gun stock.
Evidently, the right project never came along to use the rest of it,
and he must have considered it too good to toss into the little pot
belly stove he used to heat the basement. (I remember sleeping down
there once, and seeing the flue on that thing glowing cherry red in
the darkness...) You may have noticed that I'm strange about
"artifacts." I had to have it! Not as something to use, but as a
tangible piece left over from that first and only project that the
three of us had worked on together... a physical chunk of a wonderful
memory. I was 25 or 26 at the time, and 1968 seemed longer ago then
than it does now... I brought it home and put it in the basement.

Back to the present
All of my dinky little old screwdrivers were laying in a little
bunch in the corner of my table in the basement... I've got an old
machinist's chest on one end of it that I use for small drawers, but
there wasn't really much room for them, and it would be kind of clumsy
using them out of that thing. I really wanted to build that rack. I
was sure I could eventually pick up a decent piece of walnut, but I
wasn't sure where, and if we went somewhere, there was usually other
stuff to do. I considered making it out of cheap crap pine, and
staining it. I could always make another. A few days went by, and I
began thinking more about Grampa's old piece of walnut. That piece of
wood would mean nothing to anyone else. And Grampa tended to make
boxes and such for his tools... I have a cheap set of spade bits he
owned (I think spade bits are cheap almost by definition,) that reside
in a custom made fitted wooden box with a sliding lid that was
obviously Grampa's work. I hadn't actually looked at that old board
for years, and if I made that rack out of that wood, it would be right
there whenever I went down there, prominently displayed... The idea
started to appeal to me... I started looking for it, and I COULDN'T
FIND IT. On and off for several days, I scrounged around in the
basement trying to find it. It HAD to be there. The more I looked,
the more important finding it became. Before long, it was the ONLY
piece of wood on the planet that I could POSSIBLY use to make my new
rack! FINALLY I found it, on a bottom shelf in a corner under some
seldom used tools... putty guns, a hatchet, mallets, hedge clippers, a
grease gun, a splitting wedge, sets of torx screwdrivers, odd
wrenches, bicycle training wheels, paint brushes, an impact driver,
steel wool, cable ties, copper pipe, coils of electrical cable, etc,
etc, etc... I'd looked there before, but it was clear back against
the wall. I pulled it out and studied it. It wasn't the greatest
board for a project... it had that distinctly carved five or six
inches on one end, about two thirds of the other end was missing one
corner because, well, that was the outside of the tree, and there were
a couple of small cuts taken out of another corner on the good end
where Grampa must have needed a little piece to patch something in.
There was also a slight warp to the entire piece, and the board wasn't
shaped right at all to make a screwdriver rack out of. However, I'd
convinced myself that esthetically and emotionally, this was the ONLY
piece of wood that would work.
The still mostly square end of the board was just long enough at
seventeen and three eighths inches long, and it had two good corners.
The first step was to rip a long, half inch thick plank off of that
edge to make a decent rack. I hadn't used the bandsaw since I'd
hauled it up here from home, but this was the time. It was back by
the heater, and I got all the stuff off of it and looked for the on-
off switch. There wasn't one. We just plugged it in and out. OSHA
would have a fit, but they wouldn't have approved of the way Grampa
cut the ground plug off all of his tools either. I'd carefully marked
the wood, and then somewhat hesitantly (this was the only board in the
WORLD that would work) plugged in the saw and made the cut. It went
well, and I was on my way. The decent end of the other side of the
board without that bad corner was just long enough to make a couple of
brackets to hold the rack up on the wall. The two little cuts out of
one side of it would define and put limitations on the design... I
marked a small radius around that defect with a heavy old compass made
of solid steel or iron castings with "CDM" stamped on it, and marked
another curve in a mirror image to outline the two end brackets. They
sawed out easily on the bandsaw.
I was going to use a jack plane to flatten and smooth out the
long rack piece, ( I'm accustomed to using planes, they're "the
violins of the woodworker's orchestra,") but I figured this might be
the time to assemble the electric jointer-planer that Dad had bought,
but never gotten around to assembling. This took me maybe an hour,
since most steps included warnings that if not done properly, a closed-
casket funeral would probably be necessary. It was also a larger
version of this machine that cost Grampa the ring finger of his left
hand. Once I got it together, I lugged it out to the back porch. I
was beginning to wonder if I should try this thing out on "the only
board in the world that would work," so instead, I ran a few pieces of
scrap through it... It worked very well, and left a very smooth, flat,
surface. I set the table for a thin cut, and ran my piece of walnut
over it... very nice! I flipped it over and did the same to the other
side. Thirty seconds of work. I was happy with the result, and left
it at that. A few more passes would have probably gotten rid of all
the curvature from the warp, but it was close enough, and I didn't
want to cut too thin. Also, I left the edges raw... that's what that
board looked like.
To drill the holes to hold the screwdrivers, I assembled Dad's
drill press adapter. I've always been a little leery of these things
that try to turn your electric drill into something it isn't, but I
figured it might help me drill the holes a little neater. It did work
well... twelve one quarter inch holes, and four seven sixteenth inch
holes. The press adapter allowed me to let the brad point wood bits
cut very slowly into the surface of the wood, and the holes came out
very clean.
Finally, I attached the rack to the little brackets with brass
pins made from cut off key hooks, so that I could lift the top off if
I wanted to, and screwed the brackets to the wall with brass, slotted,
wood screws. DONE. FINISHED. All my little screwdrivers are sitting
in it, and I'm happy. Just looking at it feels good.

Profound Epilogue
(at least for me...)
I never would have guessed when I first saw that piece of walnut
on Thanksgiving at the age of 18, that I'd take it home with me when I
was in my middle twenties, much less that I'd build something with it
when I was 60. I mentioned earlier that that gun stock was the first
job that Grampa, Dad, and I worked on together... This was the
second.
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Default The Perfect Screwdriver Rack (Long)


"Marty" wrote

I never would have guessed when I first saw that piece of walnut
on Thanksgiving at the age of 18, that I'd take it home with me when I
was in my middle twenties, much less that I'd build something with it
when I was 60. I mentioned earlier that that gun stock was the first
job that Grampa, Dad, and I worked on together... This was the
second.


Nice story. How about posting a picture of the rack?
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Default The Perfect Screwdriver Rack (Long)

On Aug 15, 9:43*am, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote:
"Marty" wrote

* * I never would have guessed when I first saw that piece of walnut
on Thanksgiving at the age of 18, that I'd take it home with me when I
was in my middle twenties, much less that I'd build something with it
when I was 60. *I mentioned earlier that that gun stock was the first
job that Grampa, Dad, and I worked on together... *This was the
second.


Nice story. *How about posting a picture of the rack?


Thanks. The story is better than the actual rack though. I'll see
if I can make this work. Me and this laptop have a sort of
adversarial relationship...

The rack
http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2005-...rack%20001.jpg

another shot
http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2005-...rack%20002.jpg

the old enlarging camera
http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2005-...g%20Camera.jpg
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Default The Perfect Screwdriver Rack (Long)

Neat story. I appreciated it. . . . .. . . ... just a stinging
in the eyes from the beginnings of a tear.

--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
DanG
Keep the whole world singing . . .


"Marty" wrote in message
...
It's been years since I visited this group, but I found it again
during a google search and looked in... Still a wonderful
group! I
decided to post a rather personal letter I wrote to my mother
(she'll
be 90 in October,) about a recent project of mine. Since this
is a
personal letter to my mother, a little background. My father
died in
'98, and we often didn't get along. "Grampa and Gramma" were my
mother's parents... my father's parents died before I was born.
"CDM"
were Grampa's initials. My apologies for the LENGTH of this
thing,
but I felt some in here might appreciate it, and maybe identify
with
it...


Hi Mom, The other day, I finished building a special screwdriver
rack. It's a long story, and I can only figure out how to tell
it in
several disconnected episodes, so bear with me... Or maybe
humor
me...

May 17th, 2010
I picked up an old Kodak Enlarging Camera off ebay. Its a
darkroom type thing built early in the last century to make
enlargements. Unlike most modern enlargers, it looks more like
a head-
on collision between two old folding plate cameras... Two sets
of
maroon bellows connected at their smaller ends with a lens board
in
between. The negative goes on one end, the printing paper on
the
other, and by moving the various sliding parts you can choose a
size
for your picture and focus it in. You don't see many of
these...
Anyway, it came at a decent price of 56 bucks, probably because
it was
filthy and looked pretty awful in the pictures.
Once it arrived, it fortunately proved to be pretty
restorable... the first step though, was to take it apart. A
few
pieces of wood needed gluing, ALL the wood needed cleaning and
polishing, the leather needed treating, the bellows were folded
wrong,
and most of all, the 25 or 30 various nickel plated fittings
were
pretty heavily oxidized... they needed a soak in vinegar before
polishing with Simichrome. It was during my efforts to take it
apart
that this story, or at least the most recent part of it, began.
They
didn't used to make all wood screws like they do now. The slots
were
often more narrow, and modern screwdrivers just don't seem to
fit. My
little sets of small modern screwdrivers are fine, and usually
work
very well on old shutters and such, but for slightly rough
screws set
into century old hardwood, they just don't fit, and the tiny
handles
make it difficult to apply enough "omph." I found myself
relying on
one old very small wooden handled screwdriver of unknown origin.
Even
where it didn't really fit, it fit better than my more modern
screwdrivers, and the thicker handle allowed more leverage and
control. Once I got the old thing back together, I was happy
with the
results, and I got to thinking about getting more of those old,
small,
wooden handled screwdrivers.
Again, I prowled ebay. Tool collectors tend to be a
serious
bunch, but dinky little screwdrivers evidently aren't what
they're
interested in. More often than not, I put in the only bid, and
soon
had a pretty good accumulation of the things. In one case, I got
ten
of them for eight dollars and change. I've used them on a couple
more
century old cameras since then, and I've wondered why I didn't
get
more of them a long time ago. They're also kind of fun to look
at...
out of maybe fifteen of the things, no two handles are the same.
I
got to thinking they'd look good lined up on a little rack
mounted
above my desk-workbench thing in my little room in the basement,
and
it would also be very convenient. Walnut would look nice...
But
getting a small piece of walnut to make what I decided should be
a
seventeen and a quarter inch long rack turned out to me more
difficult
than I'd anticipated. I'm sure there are lumber yards offering
such
things, but in your typical small town lumberyard, there just
isn't
much call. Sam, who works out back of Rasmussen Lumber here,
said he
knew of a guy that said he had some around, but he couldn't
remember
who it was... I had one piece of walnut that might work, but it
was
special, and I didn't really want to cut it up....

November 27-28 1968
We went up to Gramma and Grampa's in Wayne for Thanksgiving.
Dad
had an old single shot Wesson carbine with a chunk broken out of
the
stock up by the receiver, and he brought it along to see if it
could
be fixed with help from Grampa. The first night, Thanksgiving
Eve,
Grampa came up with a piece of walnut, about two feet long and
roughly
an inch and quarter square. Using a coping saw, we cut an odd
shaped
piece out of one end to roughly fit the missing piece, filed
around on
it a bit, and glued and clamped it into place. Grampa, of
course, was
the carpenter, and had the tools and knew how to use them. Dad
was
pretty good at such things too, and also served as chief
perfectionist. I filled the position as gopher, etc. After the
glue
had set overnight, we shaped it down to fit on Thanksgiving day.
It
came out very well... almost undetectable. I remember Dad
saying that
the walnut was just soft enough to mold together a bit under
pressure.
As an aside, while all this was going on, I remember seeing
Grampa's old Brownie box camera on a shelf in the basement, and
Grampa
saw me admiring it. It was a very early Brownie, and since I'd
been
collecting cameras for maybe a year, Grampa gave it to me. At
the
same time, he gave Lyle an old Emerson Radio, which I believe
probably
led to an interest and a career in broadcasting... but this is
all
another story.
Anyway, that broken rifle stock was the first and only
project
that Grampa, Dad, and I worked on together. It's a memory I
treasure.

Late 1975 or '76
Not long after Grampa passed away, I was visiting Gramma in
Wayne. She suggested I take any tools I wanted out of the shop,
and I
went down and looked around... Grampa had some wonderful old
tools,
and after picking out his Stanley #45 Multiplane with it's box
of
cutters and a few other things, I saw that piece of walnut that
was
left over from fixing Dad's old rifle laying in his scrap wood
box!
It was easy to recognize with the distinctly whittled away end
where
we'd cut out the odd shaped piece to fit the broken gun stock.
Evidently, the right project never came along to use the rest of
it,
and he must have considered it too good to toss into the little
pot
belly stove he used to heat the basement. (I remember sleeping
down
there once, and seeing the flue on that thing glowing cherry red
in
the darkness...) You may have noticed that I'm strange about
"artifacts." I had to have it! Not as something to use, but as
a
tangible piece left over from that first and only project that
the
three of us had worked on together... a physical chunk of a
wonderful
memory. I was 25 or 26 at the time, and 1968 seemed longer ago
then
than it does now... I brought it home and put it in the
basement.

Back to the present
All of my dinky little old screwdrivers were laying in a
little
bunch in the corner of my table in the basement... I've got an
old
machinist's chest on one end of it that I use for small drawers,
but
there wasn't really much room for them, and it would be kind of
clumsy
using them out of that thing. I really wanted to build that
rack. I
was sure I could eventually pick up a decent piece of walnut,
but I
wasn't sure where, and if we went somewhere, there was usually
other
stuff to do. I considered making it out of cheap crap pine, and
staining it. I could always make another. A few days went by,
and I
began thinking more about Grampa's old piece of walnut. That
piece of
wood would mean nothing to anyone else. And Grampa tended to
make
boxes and such for his tools... I have a cheap set of spade
bits he
owned (I think spade bits are cheap almost by definition,) that
reside
in a custom made fitted wooden box with a sliding lid that was
obviously Grampa's work. I hadn't actually looked at that old
board
for years, and if I made that rack out of that wood, it would be
right
there whenever I went down there, prominently displayed... The
idea
started to appeal to me... I started looking for it, and I
COULDN'T
FIND IT. On and off for several days, I scrounged around in the
basement trying to find it. It HAD to be there. The more I
looked,
the more important finding it became. Before long, it was the
ONLY
piece of wood on the planet that I could POSSIBLY use to make my
new
rack! FINALLY I found it, on a bottom shelf in a corner under
some
seldom used tools... putty guns, a hatchet, mallets, hedge
clippers, a
grease gun, a splitting wedge, sets of torx screwdrivers, odd
wrenches, bicycle training wheels, paint brushes, an impact
driver,
steel wool, cable ties, copper pipe, coils of electrical cable,
etc,
etc, etc... I'd looked there before, but it was clear back
against
the wall. I pulled it out and studied it. It wasn't the
greatest
board for a project... it had that distinctly carved five or
six
inches on one end, about two thirds of the other end was missing
one
corner because, well, that was the outside of the tree, and
there were
a couple of small cuts taken out of another corner on the good
end
where Grampa must have needed a little piece to patch something
in.
There was also a slight warp to the entire piece, and the board
wasn't
shaped right at all to make a screwdriver rack out of. However,
I'd
convinced myself that esthetically and emotionally, this was the
ONLY
piece of wood that would work.
The still mostly square end of the board was just long
enough at
seventeen and three eighths inches long, and it had two good
corners.
The first step was to rip a long, half inch thick plank off of
that
edge to make a decent rack. I hadn't used the bandsaw since I'd
hauled it up here from home, but this was the time. It was back
by
the heater, and I got all the stuff off of it and looked for the
on-
off switch. There wasn't one. We just plugged it in and out.
OSHA
would have a fit, but they wouldn't have approved of the way
Grampa
cut the ground plug off all of his tools either. I'd carefully
marked
the wood, and then somewhat hesitantly (this was the only board
in the
WORLD that would work) plugged in the saw and made the cut. It
went
well, and I was on my way. The decent end of the other side of
the
board without that bad corner was just long enough to make a
couple of
brackets to hold the rack up on the wall. The two little cuts
out of
one side of it would define and put limitations on the design...
I
marked a small radius around that defect with a heavy old
compass made
of solid steel or iron castings with "CDM" stamped on it, and
marked
another curve in a mirror image to outline the two end brackets.
They
sawed out easily on the bandsaw.
I was going to use a jack plane to flatten and smooth out
the
long rack piece, ( I'm accustomed to using planes, they're "the
violins of the woodworker's orchestra,") but I figured this
might be
the time to assemble the electric jointer-planer that Dad had
bought,
but never gotten around to assembling. This took me maybe an
hour,
since most steps included warnings that if not done properly, a
closed-
casket funeral would probably be necessary. It was also a
larger
version of this machine that cost Grampa the ring finger of his
left
hand. Once I got it together, I lugged it out to the back
porch. I
was beginning to wonder if I should try this thing out on "the
only
board in the world that would work," so instead, I ran a few
pieces of
scrap through it... It worked very well, and left a very smooth,
flat,
surface. I set the table for a thin cut, and ran my piece of
walnut
over it... very nice! I flipped it over and did the same to the
other
side. Thirty seconds of work. I was happy with the result, and
left
it at that. A few more passes would have probably gotten rid of
all
the curvature from the warp, but it was close enough, and I
didn't
want to cut too thin. Also, I left the edges raw... that's what
that
board looked like.
To drill the holes to hold the screwdrivers, I assembled
Dad's
drill press adapter. I've always been a little leery of these
things
that try to turn your electric drill into something it isn't,
but I
figured it might help me drill the holes a little neater. It
did work
well... twelve one quarter inch holes, and four seven sixteenth
inch
holes. The press adapter allowed me to let the brad point wood
bits
cut very slowly into the surface of the wood, and the holes came
out
very clean.
Finally, I attached the rack to the little brackets with
brass
pins made from cut off key hooks, so that I could lift the top
off if
I wanted to, and screwed the brackets to the wall with brass,
slotted,
wood screws. DONE. FINISHED. All my little screwdrivers are
sitting
in it, and I'm happy. Just looking at it feels good.

Profound Epilogue
(at least for me...)
I never would have guessed when I first saw that piece of
walnut
on Thanksgiving at the age of 18, that I'd take it home with me
when I
was in my middle twenties, much less that I'd build something
with it
when I was 60. I mentioned earlier that that gun stock was the
first
job that Grampa, Dad, and I worked on together... This was the
second.



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Marty writes:


no pictures?


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On 8/15/2010 7:45 AM, Marty wrote:
It's been years since I visited this group, but I found it again
during a google search and looked in... Still a wonderful group! I
decided to post a rather personal letter I wrote to my mother (she'll
be 90 in October,) about a recent project of mine. Since this is a
personal letter to my mother, a little background. My father died in
'98, and we often didn't get along. "Grampa and Gramma" were my
mother's parents... my father's parents died before I was born. "CDM"
were Grampa's initials. My apologies for the LENGTH of this thing,
but I felt some in here might appreciate it, and maybe identify with
it...


No apologies necessary! On the contrary, I think we all owe you a debt of
gratitude for sharing a great story and giving us all a good reason to keep
reading this group. Thank you!

--
Free bad advice available here.
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/
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Default The Perfect Screwdriver Rack (Long)

On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 05:45:11 -0700 (PDT), Marty
wrote:

My apologies for the LENGTH of this thing,
but I felt some in here might appreciate it, and maybe identify with
it...


Thank you for that great story. I only wish I had more memories like
that of my Father. He has been gone 20 years now...
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Default The Perfect Screwdriver Rack (Long)

On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:54:17 -0500, Gordon Shumway
wrote:

On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 05:45:11 -0700 (PDT), Marty
wrote:

My apologies for the LENGTH of this thing,
but I felt some in here might appreciate it, and maybe identify with
it...


Thank you for that great story. I only wish I had more memories like
that of my Father. He has been gone 20 years now...


My father has been gone 45 years, so I don't have that many memories.
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Default The Perfect Screwdriver Rack (Long)

The Perfect Screwdriver Rack....

..... front and center, right where it belongs.

Rewarding for all of us.
Sonny
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