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The tool features a highly advanced composite housing that combines a double injection grip with contoured styling for unmatched comfort. Conveniently located are the power regulator and reverse mechanism for easy operator adjustments. Other features include a Duopact, clutch mechanism, handle exhaust, steel clutch housing, 360 degrees air inlet swivel and sensitive throttle control. Campbell Hausfield has introduced a 1/2 inch twin hammer impact wrench to its Extreme-Duty line of air tools. Designed for professional automotive and industrial applications, the twin hammer impact wrench, model PL2502, was engineered for quick removal and replacement of fasteners, tire rotation and engine rebuilds. This tool is capable of producing the highest level of power at 425 foot-pounds of torque. It produces 1,200 impacts per minute. Other features include a 1/2 inch square drive and an all-in-one adjustable power regulator that controls speed as well as forward and reverse action. The new Craftsman impact wrench features handle exhaust that routes exhaust away from both the user and the work surface. Provides torque range from 25 to 200 ft/lbs. with maximum torque of .260 ft./lbs. impactwrenchmanual in reverse. It delivers 1500 blows per minute, yet weighs only 2.5 pounds. DR POWERWAGON: Next size down in size and capacity are the DR Powerwagons--a unique line of powered garden carts made by Country Home Products, Meigs Road, P.O. Box 25, Vergennes, VT 05491; (800 711-7276. All sizes are tank-tough and capable of hauling 800 pounds of bricks, firewood, garden compost or rocks. They are maneuvered by hand with stout handles and castoring wheels at the back, thus avoiding the steering mechanism that would boost their cost. GARDEN WAY CARTS: And finally, if a powered hauler is more than you can justify, get yourself a shiny, metal impactwrenchmanual frame and brown stained, plywood box-bodied Garden Way-style garden cart like you see in many rural impactwrenchmanual and sub-urban gardens. These carts were designed by Garden Way founders Eddie Robinson and Lyman Wood back in the 1940s; they took their inspiration from the amazingly well-balanced, high-wheeled railway station impactwrenchmanual baggage cans of the day. You may remember Garden Way carts from the magazine ads that compared their lightweight and easy-dumping gardening convenience with a tippy, back-straining wheelbarrow. Perfectly balanced on easy-turning, rustproof, chrome-plated spoked wheels, a box cart will let you haul bulky or heavy loads of all kinds over an acre or so of flatland. A word of caution: Don''t overload them. I once boldly filled a small model #16 (so-named for its 16-inch wheels) with 200 pounds of flatrock and pulled it down a foot-high patio ledge. The load (twice the cart''s rated capacity), collapsed the spokes in both wheels. You''ll need a properly sized, wheeled, perhaps engine-powered machine to do the heavy hauling. The capacity you''ll need and the amount you''ll pay will be determined by the size and topography of your place, the nature of the work you intend to carry out, your financial resources, maintenance tools and skills, and available storage facilities. Ideal, albeit impractical for most of us, would be a team of horses, mules or oxen along with a hay wagon for field work, a buckboard for trips to town, and a barn and paddock. If you obtain beasts of burden, you''ll also need pasture, hay and grain to sustain them. ©2003 www.air-impact-wrench.com. All rights reserved. |