The Trap of the Pre-Packaged Kit Starting a new project often triggers a survival instinct to buy every tool at once. Adam Savage argues against the allure of the pre-packaged tool kit, noting that except for niche fields like bicycle maintenance, these bundles rarely serve a maker’s specific needs. They clutter your workspace with mediocre versions of things you might never use while lacking the precise instrument required for your current build. Instead of a one-size-fits-all box, Savage pushes for individual acquisition, allowing your inventory to grow organically alongside your skills. Exploiting Inefficient Markets While the internet has turned used clothing into an efficient, high-priced market, tools remain a "marvelously inefficient" frontier. You can still find high-quality hand tools for pennies on the dollar if you know where to look. Antique malls and local auctions are gold mines for basic gear like hammers, hacksaws, and pliers. In Northern California, Savage even targets tech startup failure auctions. These events are filled with people hunting for servers and R&D tech who ignore the woodshop corner, leaving heavy-duty table saws and hardware up for grabs at a fraction of their retail value. The Cheap Tool Litmus Test One of the most pragmatic strategies for any builder is the "buy cheap first" rule. If you aren't sure a tool will integrate into your workflow, buy the budget version from Harbor Freight or Temu. Use it until it breaks. If you wear it out, you’ve proven that the tool is essential to your practice, justifying a major capital investment in a pro-grade replacement. Savage famously applied this to a pneumatic rivet gun; the cheap version lasted a year, but the $150 replacement has lasted decades. Funding Your Workshop Upgrades Acquiring a high-end tool doesn't always require dipping into personal savings. Savage recommends the "job-based acquisition" model: bid for a contract or take on a project that specifically requires a tool you don't own. Include the cost of that tool in your bid. This approach turns professional labor into a mechanism for shop growth, providing a "shiny new tool endorphin rush" that is paid for by the work itself. Whether it's a Pfaff sewing machine or a specialized Japanese planter, the best tools enter your headspace when they solve a recurring problem you can no longer ignore.
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- 8 hours ago