drmitchgibson
The white Morgan Freeman
1. 8" heavy-duty angle grinder, unguarded wheel, and will need a new power cord eventually and a new wheel immediately. It's huge and heavy.
2. Drill sharpening jig. Has a foot with holes located to mount to a bench or machine grinder, and can be set to sharpen to multiple angles, point geometries, and reliefs.
3. BK Precision Oscilloscope. I forget the max signal speed, but it's probably 20MHz. Comes with variable impedance probe.
4. Hewlett-Packard frequency counter, 55MHz max speed.
5. Simpson Benchtop Digital Mulitmeter. It only ranges to 1/10,000th, but it's a good meter.
6. Plant Growth Photometer. Needs battery. If you have plants you grow indoors, you would use this to find out how much light you're directing to them, and adjust from there.
7. Automatic bread making machine. It's in great shape, but I don't use it anymore.
8. 20-drawer small parts bin, 5 horizontal and 4 vertical rows. Drawers 2" tall, 3" wide, and 11" deep. Includes some dividers. Dark grey, can be surface mounted or wall mounted.
9. 50-drawer small parts bin, 5 horizontal and 6 vertical rows. Drawers 2-1/2" wide, 1-1/4" tall, 5-3/4" deep. Electric blue, can be surface mounted or wall mounted.
10. Baldor double-ended buffer. Looks like a bench grinder, but has two unguarded ends with brakes. 1/4 HP and 3450 RPM, so you can only really use it for burnishing and buffing.
11. Bench grinder stand. Can be mounted to anchor bolts or you can add leveling feet. Also may need new holes located for the tool to be mounted on it. Also, it's very heavy.
11. Two sets of dead bolts (3) and door handles (2), keyed alike per set. Changing your locks isn't cheap, but now these are useless to me. There are also a few random dead-bolts in there also, and one or two unopened units. These are in a kind of disarray at the moment, so if there's any interest I'll sort them out exactly to find out what's what.
2. Drill sharpening jig. Has a foot with holes located to mount to a bench or machine grinder, and can be set to sharpen to multiple angles, point geometries, and reliefs.
3. BK Precision Oscilloscope. I forget the max signal speed, but it's probably 20MHz. Comes with variable impedance probe.
4. Hewlett-Packard frequency counter, 55MHz max speed.
5. Simpson Benchtop Digital Mulitmeter. It only ranges to 1/10,000th, but it's a good meter.
6. Plant Growth Photometer. Needs battery. If you have plants you grow indoors, you would use this to find out how much light you're directing to them, and adjust from there.
7. Automatic bread making machine. It's in great shape, but I don't use it anymore.
8. 20-drawer small parts bin, 5 horizontal and 4 vertical rows. Drawers 2" tall, 3" wide, and 11" deep. Includes some dividers. Dark grey, can be surface mounted or wall mounted.
9. 50-drawer small parts bin, 5 horizontal and 6 vertical rows. Drawers 2-1/2" wide, 1-1/4" tall, 5-3/4" deep. Electric blue, can be surface mounted or wall mounted.
10. Baldor double-ended buffer. Looks like a bench grinder, but has two unguarded ends with brakes. 1/4 HP and 3450 RPM, so you can only really use it for burnishing and buffing.
11. Bench grinder stand. Can be mounted to anchor bolts or you can add leveling feet. Also may need new holes located for the tool to be mounted on it. Also, it's very heavy.
11. Two sets of dead bolts (3) and door handles (2), keyed alike per set. Changing your locks isn't cheap, but now these are useless to me. There are also a few random dead-bolts in there also, and one or two unopened units. These are in a kind of disarray at the moment, so if there's any interest I'll sort them out exactly to find out what's what.