
Tag Archives: workshop equipment
POWKITS 12V Cordless Drill Review: Fit Our Home Shop?
We opened the POWKITS 12V Cordless Drill Tool Set expecting a simple starter drill, but the “home shop in a case” vibe was immediate. The drill itself feels light enough to use one-handed while we’re balancing a shelf bracket, yet not toy-like. For quick household jobs—tightening cabinet hinges, drilling pilot holes, assembling flat-pack furniture—the 12V power hits a practical sweet spot. What surprised us most was the 142-piece spread: bits, fasteners, and small hand tools that actually reduce those mid-project runs to the toolbox (or the hardware store). The battery-and-charger combo is straightforward, and the portable case keeps everything from wandering off. The real question for us: does convenience outweigh pro-grade muscle?
Sasylvia Xmas Tree Fence Jigs Review: For Our Shop?
After unboxing the Sasylvia Christmas Fence Decorations set (30 pieces, 16’’ high), we immediately saw the appeal for our shop’s holiday corner: classic wooden picket silhouettes, scaled perfectly to “frame” a Christmas tree without swallowing the whole display. We tested a quick semicircle setup on a rug and then on a bare floor, and the sections felt light enough to reposition yet substantial enough to read as décor, not craft scraps. The real question for us was function—could it gently discourage curious pets or wandering hands? It won’t replace a true gate, but it does create a clear visual boundary. As a seasonal staging tool, it’s charming, simple, and surprisingly photogenic.
RAK Universal Socket Wrench Review: Right for Our Shop?
We’ve tested plenty of “one-tool-fits-all” gadgets, so we approached the RAK Super Universal Socket Tool with cautious curiosity. In our shop, speed matters, and this 7–19mm universal socket wrench set promises to skip the constant swapping of sockets by gripping different shapes—standard nuts, odd bolts, even slightly rounded hardware. Paired with the included power drill adapter, it turns quick fixes into a two-step routine: fit, drive, done. The gator-grip style pins feel surprisingly secure on common household and light-duty tasks, though we still reached for traditional sockets when torque demands got serious. As a Valentine’s Day or birthday gift for men, dads, or husbands, it’s the kind of “cool gadget” that actually earns drawer space.
Hizmivos Wire Stripper Tool Review: Right for Our Shop?
We’ve been chasing a cleaner, faster way to process scrap without turning the bench into a mess, so the Hizmivos Manual Wire Stripping Machine caught our eye. It’s built to handle a wide range of gauges—roughly 0.06 to 1 inch—and that flexibility matters when our copper pile is a mixed bag of appliance cords, THHN, and thicker cable. We like that it can run two ways: a steady hand crank when we want control, or drill-powered when we’re trying to move through volume. The real test, though, is whether it feeds smoothly, keeps the blade aligned, and strips insulation without chewing up the copper. In this review, we put it through our everyday shop routine.
Klein 1005 Crimper/Pliers Review: Right for Our Shop?
We’ve put the Klein Tools 1005 Cutting/Crimping Tool through the kind of daily use that quickly exposes a pretender. On paper it’s a straightforward cutter/crimper for 10–22 AWG terminals and connectors, handling both insulated and non‑insulated ends—exactly the range that crowds our bench. In hand, it feels like a classic shop companion: sturdy, no-nonsense, and confident when it closes on a crimp. We like that it aims to be an all-in-one helper, trimming wire cleanly and then moving straight into a controlled squeeze for consistent connections. Still, “Made in USA” and a famous name aren’t the whole story. The real question is whether the 1005 earns a permanent spot in our tool roll.
Milwaukee 2626-20 Oscillating Multi-Tool: Our Shop?
In our shop, the Milwaukee 2626-20 M18 oscillating multi-tool quickly proved it’s more than a “nice-to-have” gadget. With up to 18,000 OPM, it hums through a surprising range of tasks—flush cuts in trim, quick notches in plywood, and those awkward, corner-hugging jobs that usually demand three different tools. We appreciated that Milwaukee includes woodcutting blades and a sanding pad with sheets, letting us jump straight into real work without a separate accessory run. The cordless layout keeps our bench area uncluttered, and the tool feels ready for jobsite abuse. Since it’s sold as a power-tool-only kit, we treated it as a smart add-on for anyone already running M18 batteries.
KAKURI Coping Saw Review: Worth It for Our Home Shop?
In our home shop, the KAKURI Coping Saw Coping Frame and 5 Replacement Blades Set arrived like a small invitation to slow down and cut with intention. The frame feels straightforward in the hand—light enough for long sessions, but steady when we’re tracing tight curves in wood board. We appreciated having multiple blades on deck; swapping from a fine-tooth option for cleaner scrollwork to a tougher blade for plastic (and even the occasional thin metal piece) kept the pace moving without improvising. Tensioning the blade took a minute to dial in, yet once set, the saw tracked predictably and made inside cuts less fussy than our jigsaw. It’s not flashy, but it’s practical—exactly what we want on a crowded bench.
EZARC Obsidian Oscillating Saw Blades: Our Shop?
In our shop, oscillating blades aren’t “nice-to-haves”—they’re the difference between a clean cut and a long afternoon. The EZARC Obsidian Carbide Oscillating Saw Blades (3-pack) claim multi-material confidence, and we put that promise to work where it matters: trimming PVC, nibbling through drywall, and bumping into the inevitable hidden nail. The carbide edge feels built for those mixed-mess moments, when wood turns into metal mid-stroke and most blades start whining. We also like the quick-release compatibility, which keeps our workflow moving instead of hunting for hex keys. Are these the blades we reach for first? That depends on the job—but they’re firmly in our “ready drawer” for anything unpredictable.
Bosch PS31 12V Drill/Driver Review: Our Shop Fit?
We didn’t expect a 12V drill to earn much bench time, but the BOSCH PS31-2A 12V Max 3/8-Inch Drill/Driver Kit kept sneaking into our hands. Its compact body slips into cabinet corners and tight stud bays where bulkier tools usually stall the job. The variable-speed trigger feels predictable, letting us feather in small screws without stripping heads, then ramp up for light drilling when needed. With two 2 Ah batteries in the kit, downtime stayed low—one pack working while the other sat on the charger. It’s not trying to be a brute, and we didn’t ask it to. For everyday assembly, punch-list fixes, and quick shop tasks, it may be exactly our pace.
Wire Twister Tool Review: Right for Our Home Shop?
We didn’t expect two small drill attachments to change how we handle wiring projects, but this Wire Stripping and Twisting Tool set made a strong first impression in our home shop. The “quick stripping” feature feels like it’s designed for real-life use: we slid in the cable, let the drill do the work, and watched the insulation peel back with less fuss than our usual manual stripper routine. The wire nut twister is the real time-saver, especially when we’re connecting multiple leads in a junction box and want consistent twists without sore wrists. It’s not magic—setup and steady drill control matter—but it’s a compact, portable upgrade that earns a spot in our toolbox.


















