Cheap things you bought but DO like
Discussion
Condi said:
P-Jay said:
Jamescrs said:
OpulentBob said:
A £900 brand new Chinese moped. I love it, traffic is no longer a thing, alleyways are my friend (pushing the bike 20m through an alley can avoid about a mile driving round the roads), park it anywhere, 3 quid to fill up, less than £60 to tax and insure for a year. For getting from one side of town to the other, it's brilliant. No CBT required. And I can take a pillion (slowly). Best bit of bargainomics ever, AFAIAC.
Why is no CBT required? I'm glad to hear the £900 Mopeds are unreliable death traps though, I'm dying to find a way to make the commute more fun once my Daughter is old enough to take herself to school.
Occupation Former Economic Migrant and Full Time Knob
Region Essex. Innit fam.
Bill said:
jimmytheone said:
Fed up with cheap plastic beach spades, I invested in a roughneck mini spade, carbon steel blade and fibreglass handle that’ll cope with Hebridean & Cornish beach digging. Serious digging, think multiple dams and channels stretching 100s of metres.
So impressed I went back for 3 more for the kids to use.
Off to buy a grub axe version this afternoon
Aha, snap! So impressed I went back for 3 more for the kids to use.
Off to buy a grub axe version this afternoon
TorqueDirty said:
Vandenberg said:
A roughneck mini mattock from Wickes for £10, it has become my go to garden.
Vandenberg said:
TorqueDirty said:
Interesting thing to make in to a garden. Is it laid mainly to lawn or do you grow vegetables on it too?
Would say about 60% lawn the rest is veggie beds and flower/shrub beds. Most recent job was to dig out a mature shrub with limited access.I even bought my MIL two of them as a xmas present, which she also loves to use.
It's not often I will rave about a product but the Roughneck mattocks are simply brilliant for the money.
I was very lightly taking the pi*s. You said it had become your "go to garden" rather than your "go to garden tool" so I was wondering how you actually make a mattock in to a garden.
Not doubting that it is a very good tool - but as a garden I suspect it would be something of a compromise!
- 'Magic' clothes brush, the kind with the swivelling head. £4.50 or thereabouts.
- Non-genuine M-Sport gearknob without the M badge. Shorter than the standard gearknob and in far better condition. £11.
- Refills for my Fisher Space Pen. I like, but don't love the ink. One of the Diplomat refills smudged less. £5.
Cheap "Kiwi" brand kitchen knives from Thailand. Around a tenner or less.
I bought a few more than two years ago following a comment on Pistonheads
I bought a few more than two years ago following a comment on Pistonheads
ac13 said:
A left field suggestion is Kiwi and Kom-Kom knives. I'm just a keen amateur, used various German and Japanese makes even made a few knives using O1 steel, built my own furnace, (but that is another story), but just for a laugh I tried the Kiwi brand knives, particularly this one.
https://www.chopchopchop.co.uk/173.html.
I now find that I use this more than any of the other knives. It is very thin, very easy to sharpen and slices really well rather than chops. It probably wouldn't work in a commercial kitchen because you would have to resharpen them a lot but here is an old review.
https://www.tactical-life.com/tactical-knives/cred...
When using them, they still "feel" just as sharp now as my couple of Global knives - now demoted to the back of the knife block. https://www.chopchopchop.co.uk/173.html.
I now find that I use this more than any of the other knives. It is very thin, very easy to sharpen and slices really well rather than chops. It probably wouldn't work in a commercial kitchen because you would have to resharpen them a lot but here is an old review.
https://www.tactical-life.com/tactical-knives/cred...
Secondhand Estwing geology hammer, bought for £1 from the mum of a mate in 1990.
Saw me through a degree, a masters and a PhD. It’s utterly beautifully made. Everyone else had a £20 piece of crap they had to replace regularly.
(BTW, wear safety goggles, and preferably a full suit of armour, when trying to get a sample of Shap Granite.)
Saw me through a degree, a masters and a PhD. It’s utterly beautifully made. Everyone else had a £20 piece of crap they had to replace regularly.
(BTW, wear safety goggles, and preferably a full suit of armour, when trying to get a sample of Shap Granite.)
OllieJolly said:
One of these. Less than £5, I don't think there's a surface in the house/car that I haven't tried to use it on.
I even tried it on the cat, and disturbingly I think she liked it.
I hope that doesn't get taken out of context...
Levin said:
OllieJolly said:
What is it, though? You mentioned using it on surfaces in the car and I'm getting my hopes up it's something decent for interior fabrics.Gassing Station | The Lounge | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff