Why a Toolbag Rather Instead of a Toobox/Case

Michael Magness IFixPianos at yahoo.com
Thu Nov 1 10:23:19 MST 2007


I originally posted this in response to the 18" x 12-3/4" X 6"  aluminum
case post of yesterday. As I thought about it( Is it just me or do most of
you think well while tuning?) it occured to me that my reasons might be of
more general interest.

My decision to not continue with the aluminum cases was not just the lack of
quality but the concern for front doors, furniture, etc.
A hard case raises a liability issue since the case and its
attachments(hinges, d-rings,rivets, corner tabs) are just that, hard and can
therefore scratch doors, furniture, pianos. No matter how careful you try to
be, accidents can and do happen. I was taught by a wise tech who told us to
always put your case on the floor, never on a chair, table, bench, always
the floor. However chair legs, sofa fronts(the wooden kind) piano legs,
china cabinets, grandfather/mother clocks etc. are all in close proximity,
frequently, of the piano and can be bumped, scratched, dented by a hard
case.
So as I noticed more techs in my chapter going to tool bags it seemed this
was a logical move to forestall any liability problems. My current tool bag
has no outer snaps, zippers, d-rings, hinges, rivets or metal of any kind on
the front or back to scratch or dent anything. It has a flap that drops over
the zipper front and back the d-rings are on the sides near the top and do
not protrude and are coated with plastic and the snaps are much smaller than
the strap. It has the added advantage of durability and not being very
expensive but that is truly secondary to the peace of mind I feel carrying
it into a home. Yes it is a Duluth Big house toolbag.

It has the added advantage of having extra room so I can add tools for
specific jobs if I am in a situation where it is difficult to run to my
truck, when I work at the University I have to park 3 or 4 blocks away and
prefer to load up extra things I may need. Also If I'm in a home and have
run out to the truck a few times, I can put everything into it when I leave
and sort it out at the truck, versus making 2 or 3 trips out. The major
complaint I have heard about my toolbag is that it is too big and when
filled too heavy, I agree that is why mine isn't full except on the
occasional trip leaving a home after I've hauled in extra tools. A handy
thing when it's raining, snowing, -20 degrees or colder or when I'm already
an hour late for supper! Also mine is the medium sized one and it works for
me, I'm 6'4" and weigh in about 285. There is a smaller one that still will
hold all you need and more.

For those jobs where I am doing, say a major grand regulation I have a
standard tool box, a big 24" ugly yellow plastic toolbox with all of my
regulating eqipment in it, from punchings to teflon to McLube and Teflon
spray and regulation specs book. I have another for parts only, another for
felt only and finally a hardware box with a screw assortment, I work in
areas where there isn't a hardware store on every corner! I use a Craftsman
toolbag for my backup tools, stringing tools, pin driver, 2# hammer, string
tails, pinblock support jack, vise grips, loop maker, brass flange holder
etc. Finally I use my old aluminum case for wire coils and the few universal
strings I carry.

I don't fault anyone for their choice of what they use for carrying their
tools, when I started out I used a plastic attache case, I paid $4 for,
followed by an $18 Wards metal tackle box which served for over a dozen
years before I "graduated" to my first aluminum case. It's all a matter of
what you're comfortable with and serves your individual purposes.
My point here was just to enlighten about my reasons for moving away from
the aluminum cases other than the obvious quality issues.

Mike
-- 
The way some people find fault, you'd think there was some kind of reward.
Michael Magness
Magness Piano Service
608-786-4404
www.IFixPianos.com <http://www.ifixpianos.com/>
email mike at ifixpianos.com
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