I still have not purchased new brackets, straps, or anti squeak because of the price, as you mentioned
@Grit dog , for the brackets. I am still on the fence about buying new or restoring old.
I think you just talked me in to grinding down the old brackets clean and painting to save money.
Only putting myself in your shoes and thinking wwgd. What would Gritdog do?
And I’m cheap. As evidenced by its a challenge to redo an old car and end up with something worth more than you’ve spent $ on it.
Which I somehow managed to pull off with the blue truck. Some combo of luck and skill and a lot of hours invested of course.
Anti squeak? I’m sure it’s only like $20 but any host of materials can be substituted for free depending what you, your neighbor or buddy have laying around. I cut strips of ice n water shield leftover from roofing the house. But rubber strips like an inner tube or tar paper, sound deadening sheets, even a piece of thin plastic like cutting up one of the kids old plastic sleds.
Just an example of how to save a buck. And every buck you save is two you can justifiably spend on a tool to make this project or the next one easier!
But I get it, that in itself is a big expense.
I’ve been collecting buying and inheriting tools since I was in jr high. And I still probably spend $3-500/year avg on new tools. Even with freebies, garage sales and not many single large purchases.
if my 30 year old air compressor dies or I decide it’s time to upgrade to decent tool boxes or….that $ avg will go up.