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-   -   Home Depot In-store donation (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=135717)

jvriezen 12-03-2015 12:58

Home Depot In-store donation
 
The local Home Depot has offered our team $100 off of an in-store $125 purchase.

The catch is that it has to be in-store, and not items only available for online order. (Bench grinder we were thinking of is not an option for this..)

Any suggestions? (particularly ones that may not be obvious, like a drill), especially something that is not substantially cheaper base price elsewhere-- want to get a good value for the purchase/donation.

Thanks!

Joseph Smith 12-03-2015 13:02

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
How about a belt sander? From my experience, a belt sander is better than a grinder for cleaning up and grinding aluminum anyway, but it can also handle steel, wood, or whatever you want to throw at it.
How about a welder? Plasma cutter? Mini bandsaw? Tool chest?
I'd have a field day with an opportunity like that!

Zebra_Fact_Man 12-03-2015 13:07

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Does it have to be one item or is it off the whole receipt?

SJaladi 12-03-2015 13:36

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Here is a quick list of things I can think of off the top of my head:

Rolling tool chest (great for the pit and the shop)

Heavy duty air compressor (great for air tools and for a quick way to test pneumatics in a prototype capacity)

Air Riveter (much better than a manual one)

Nice set of assorted hand tools (never hurts to stock up on hand tools)

Bench top drill press (great for light duty jobs and the pit)

Belt/disc combo sander (much better than a grinder for handling a variety of materials)

Drill bits and saw blades (great way to stock up on spares)

If all else fails just wander the aisles of Home Depot until you find enough cool stuff to qualify for the discount :D

jvriezen 12-03-2015 13:42

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Zebra_Fact_Man (Post 1456951)
Does it have to be one item or is it off the whole receipt?

Multiple items is fine.

hionwind 12-03-2015 13:49

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
1678 has been buying the Ryobi cordless drills from Home Depot and we love them. Make sure you get the new Lithium-Ion version which is lime green (perhaps that's why we love them!)

jvriezen 12-03-2015 13:54

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Also looking to get something that will be long lasting (not consumable -- hand tools (wrenches etc.) seem to be consumable around robotics teams...)

philso 12-03-2015 13:56

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Joseph Smith (Post 1456948)
How about a belt sander? From my experience, a belt sander is better than a grinder for cleaning up and grinding aluminum anyway, but it can also handle steel, wood, or whatever you want to throw at it.
How about a welder? Plasma cutter? Mini bandsaw? Tool chest?
I'd have a field day with an opportunity like that!

A belt sander is also easier to use SAFELY than a grinder.

One alternative is to get a bunch of good quality drill bits (multiples of the commonly used sizes) and a few Deburring Tools.

A second alternative is to get a small Band Saw. It's not the greatest but it will be easier to get good cuts on tubing and sheet goods than with a hacksaw.

A third alternative would be to get some clamps. On the weekend, I saw some good quality Bessey brand clamps on sale in one of our local stores.

hionwind 12-03-2015 14:10

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
This looks like a great deal:

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Ryobi-One...6?N=5yc1vZc7jj

Bob Steele 12-03-2015 14:17

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
You might also think about a Dremel and the metal cutting disks. This comes in quite handy too and they definitely have them at Home Depot.

jvriezen 12-03-2015 14:32

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by philso (Post 1456970)
A belt sander is also easier to use SAFELY than a grinder.

One alternative is to get a bunch of good quality drill bits (multiples of the commonly used sizes) and a few Deburring Tools.

A second alternative is to get a small Band Saw. It's not the greatest but it will be easier to get good cuts on tubing and sheet goods than with a hacksaw.

A third alternative would be to get some clamps. On the weekend, I saw some good quality Bessey brand clamps on sale in one of our local stores.

Thanks for the tip on the deburring tool. My previous team had one, and we've been missing one on my new team. Tried a couple other places that didn't have that type. Didn't realize HD carried those.

rich2202 12-03-2015 14:32

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Wood/plywood to build a shipping crate for your robot to the Championship!

philso 12-03-2015 14:47

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hionwind (Post 1456978)

^
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+1
This is the first Ryobi product I would consider purchasing for myself. It is reasonably well made and has sufficient power for everything our team needs it to do. Our team has two of these drills, 6 batteries (4 compact + 2 high capacity) and a 6-Port-SuperCharger. With 10-20 people working, we never run out of batteries except when we were cutting "speed holes" in our chassis with a couple of hole saws. The batteries charge very quickly (under half an hour, I think).

Quote:

Originally Posted by jvriezen (Post 1456984)
Thanks for the tip on the deburring tool. My previous team had one, and we've been missing one on my new team. Tried a couple other places that didn't have that type. Didn't realize HD carried those.

I found them in the tool section of the plumbing department. I got a good workout the weekend before Bag & Tag using one of these to clean up all our "speed holes". Unscrew the cap on the end of the handle and remove the spare blade. Put the spare blade somewhere safe, say in your tool box. We found that the end cap tends to unscrew on it's own, allowing the spare blade to fall out and get lost.

jvriezen 12-03-2015 16:32

Re: Home Depot In-store donation
 
Decision made, thanks all:

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Ryobi-Ben...601G/205509608

Plus some miscellaneous things like deburring tool(s) and maybe various sanding belts/discs to go with it.

Also thanks for the tip on the saving the deburring spare blade.. Not sure putting it in a safe place will make it findable either with how things go in our 'shop'


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