Ibanez RG 350EX
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2024
There's nothing inherently wrong with this, but even the Chink-iest of Chinesium calipers is plenty good enough for measuring fasteners.Get a good mitsutomo caliper fir measurement.
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There's nothing inherently wrong with this, but even the Chink-iest of Chinesium calipers is plenty good enough for measuring fasteners.Get a good mitsutomo caliper fir measurement.
It's a long shot, but you might try local gun stores. I've gotten some pretty good deals on occasion.Where do you guys recommend for buying MREs, preferably as cheaply as possible?
I like to keep all my screws, nuts, washers, nails, and bolts. Get a tool box or fishing tackle box. Save and label them with a marker. The divider @DavidS877 suggested is also a great idea. Look at it this way. Say one day you need a few screws to hang something or ones are missing from a package. Instead of going to a store and spending 5.95. Just spend 15 mins seeing if a spare screw fits instead. Next go to a local pawn shop and buy cheap tools. Starting a tool box is very manly.These screws came with some HDDs for screwing platters into trays. They fit screw holes in the platter. I have no idea what to do with these. There's not really a way to label this bag or keep it someplace that says to me "this is for screwing into platters".
Do screws have any kind of uniform sizing and thread sizing that I can group these by in bins? I honestly have no idea how to begin categorizing spare parts like this
Team Red reporting. That's exactly what I use to organize my hardware.
QBrick enjoyer here, higher cost really gives you alot of options.You can get fancier ones too, for a higher cost.
Or a much higher cost if you're on team Red.
I just throw all the spare screws in a tray like this one, really easy and convenient for my simple brain.I'll start. How do you organize spare parts? I have a bunch of these fucking screws from various PC projects. Like every harddrive, server, computer part, comes with its own set of screws.
Yes actually, but I don't know the one for drive trays offhand. But 99% of screws in computers are "M[X]x[Y]" type, where X and Y are numbers. X is the diameter, Y is the length. They all have the same screw pitch and 99.99999999% of the time are flat philips heads (as in non-countersunk, the screw from the side looks like a T instead of a Y). For example, most of the screws holding laptops together are M3x4 iirc. The one to keep an M.2 drive from flopping around is usually an M3x2.Do screws have any kind of uniform sizing and thread sizing that I can group these by in bins?
I didn't know how much I needed a drive bay drawer until now. finally a convenient place for my methI just throw all the spare screws in a tray like this one, really easy and convenient for my simple brain.
If they're just spare screws, just put them in a spare screw drawer. If you need it, you'll know where it's at.
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From Amazon Review
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1. There is a site called KingSurplus in the US (I am unaffiliated) that is the cheapest vendor for buying new, bulk MREs from vendors like SOPAKCO. https://kingsurplus.com/u-s-military/mre-meal-ready-to-eatWhere do you guys recommend for buying MREs, preferably as cheaply as possible?
I'm really really surprised no one has mentioned the timeless classic- an empty coffee tin can.
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I don't know how the prices compare but there's a fair number of cities where the Mormons have stores where the public can buy shelf stable items. Google: Mormon Home Storage Center.If your goal is long-term food storage, look into staple items like rice, flour, honey, and #10 cans of freeze dried food.
This is sage advice. I was much happier when I embraced this philosophy.Trying to get into the nitty gritty of organizing down to the last screw isn't worth it, especially with spares where you're gonna have them in all shapes and colors at random and it's very unlikely those screws will serve in another context. Consider organizing by "theme" or activity instead, i.e. pick a box where you put all the PC spare parts : screws, unused cables, old hardware you want to keep around, etc.
What is the best way to get antique/surplus stuff for cheap? Surplus stores have got to get them in big batches somehow.
Costco, literally. I get "camping meals" which don't use a heat pouch, but potato potato in my caseWhere do you guys recommend for buying MREs, preferably as cheaply as possible?