Pry bar Comparison & Uses: My 6 Favorites for Better Leverage

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  • Опубліковано 31 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 312

  • @daveoneshot5681
    @daveoneshot5681 2 роки тому +188

    I've used up my 16 years.....now at 81, I think I'll go for another 19 to see what it's like at 100.

    • @katielin2379
      @katielin2379 2 роки тому +8

      ❤ love your attitude Sir!

    • @ShotGunner5609
      @ShotGunner5609 2 роки тому +7

      Yesss. That's a nice round number!

    • @LetsBuildAHouse
      @LetsBuildAHouse 2 роки тому +4

      LOVE IT!

    • @PFPTHEGREATEST
      @PFPTHEGREATEST 2 роки тому +8

      Keep up the good work young man 👍

    • @yohamnysdiaz
      @yohamnysdiaz 2 роки тому +4

      Iam 31 now and tell my daughter iam going to be around till about 125 years old then we will recalculate 😅. Best of luck to you and my the best years be ahead of you

  • @chrisboonstra5108
    @chrisboonstra5108 2 роки тому +35

    I’m a 25 year old carpenter apprentice in Canada. I have watched Scott go on about Burke bars on UA-cam for years now and found one at a garage sale for $20. I jumped at it immediately. THANK. YOU. SCOTT. This bar is a machine. I love it. My whole crew loves it. I haven’t touched my roofing pry bar since. I love this channel so much, it has changed the way I approach and appreciate my job. “Aim for perfect, settle for excellence.” You said it, man. Cheers

    • @mdeamicis
      @mdeamicis Рік тому

      I bought one shortly after the first time seeing one in use in this channel. Always in my truck and used often. The eastwig 16 inch 3 in 1 pro roofer is a mini burk bar with a catspaw that you can put in a flatbar sleeve hanging inboard of your gastner bag.

  • @mae2759
    @mae2759 2 роки тому +65

    If there's anything comforting about this video is that after 1:00, we know we have at least 16 more years of content to enjoy! :)

  • @dougcorrigan9200
    @dougcorrigan9200 2 роки тому +53

    Agreed Scott. I’m 68 and leverage and hydraulic force are what enable me to continue to farm, heat with wood and maintain my home and equipment.

  • @lindacgrace2973
    @lindacgrace2973 2 роки тому +47

    I'm a huge fan of Aristotle, too. But it was Archimedes who said "Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum, and I can move the world."

  • @Estarlio
    @Estarlio 2 роки тому +18

    Thank you for the wealth of good-natured knowledge you've shared over the years.

  • @BubbasDad
    @BubbasDad 2 роки тому +6

    Your comment that really stood out for me is: "When you are working by yourself". My entire working career, I was always happier when I was working by myself. I guess I'm just not a person who needs to be part of a team. I've never needed to be entertained. Just love to do the work.

  • @Pirate-530
    @Pirate-530 2 роки тому +4

    Started as a plumber at 16 started framing at 18 found you at 19 watched all your tips and tricks and productivity videos became a union fire sprinkler fitter at 24 and now at 25 I’m a union iron worker and here we are…
    still teaching me clever little tricks
    Thanks for teaching all the insider tips 🎉

    • @mrmicro22
      @mrmicro22 2 роки тому +2

      Our country needs more workers, not sitters. Good on you.

  • @adamcinna1163
    @adamcinna1163 2 роки тому +5

    Thank you for your videos. I'm a 38 year old contractor, I work 7 days a week and seldomly take a day off. Falling asleep to your voice is peaceful and reassuring that I'm doing whats right... Wake up and continue building the next day. Thank you.

  • @charlesstevens8913
    @charlesstevens8913 2 роки тому +2

    Never even heard of a Burke Bar 'til I watched this channel, and the BB saved my keister in tearing apart a 25 year old deck that I was rebuilding, which was 32' x 16'. Used during the Covid fiasco when it was hard to find labor willing to even bid on the job...which I didn't want to do (I was 75 y.o. at the time)....it made the job so easy that I found myself laughing half the time, and it probably saved my wife the grotesque experience of having to give me mouth-to-mouth first aid!! Used it on several 'one-off' type situations, and it was better than having a second person to help. Also, depending on your neighborhood, it's not a bad thing to have sitting near the front door of your home! Great tool to make me feel like I had the strength of 2 or 3 men!

  • @Leafgreen1976
    @Leafgreen1976 2 роки тому +3

    What a natural teacher you are.

  • @tmontel2116
    @tmontel2116 2 роки тому +1

    I've been watching you since your first circular saw video 5+ years ago. I haven't seen you on my feed in a year or so and here you are. You haven't aged a day friend. I can't even explain to you how much I have learned from you over the years. 5 years ago I had no idea how to do anything. So many of your videos have helped me in home ownership and I thank you so much glad to see your videos on my feed again! I've got a lot of catching up to do.

  • @fprintf
    @fprintf 2 роки тому +5

    I was introduced to Andrew Camarata's UA-cam channel when you made his Burke Bar. I just wanted to say thank you for introducing me to both the concept of burke bars and to Andrew's channel.

  • @jadenephrite
    @jadenephrite 19 днів тому +2

    Regarding Scott Wadsworth @ 0:19, it was not Aristotle who said give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum to put it on and I'll move the world. Instead it was Archimedes who said it. Archimedes was an ancient Greek genius, mathematician, physicist and engineer who lived in Syracuse, Sicily from 287 to 212 BC. It was Archimedes who exclaimed "Eureka" (εὕρηκα) when he figured out how to test the golden crown of King Hiero II to determine that it had been alloyed with cheaper metal by a dishonest goldsmith. Archimedes also invented a gigantic grappling hook crane machine that sank Roman warships when they attacked Syracuse in 214 BC. On the other hand, Aristotle was an ancient Greek philosopher who lived a century earlier from 384 to 322 BC.

  • @ronmcrae7216
    @ronmcrae7216 2 роки тому +2

    After watching you I finally found a mini burk bar with a 4 foot handle and it really handy. Thanks for the content.

  • @RogerCinkel
    @RogerCinkel 2 місяці тому +1

    Great topic,I learned at a early age in the trade about leverage. There is 1 bar you didnt show which was my favorite on large formwork jobs. A 4 ft 90degree bar. Just a larger version of your gorrilla bar.

  • @williammccarthy5696
    @williammccarthy5696 2 роки тому +43

    Not Aristotle but Archimedes said "give me a lever big enough and a fulcrum to use it on and I will move the world"

    • @ricksanchez3176
      @ricksanchez3176 2 роки тому +16

      I'll not fault the man for a little Archemedes screw up, there's Pliny of other good things in the video, I'd say he still hit a Homer.

    • @BScrimpton
      @BScrimpton 2 роки тому +3

      Ha! Man knows his Greeks.

    • @thaddeuslarimer5703
      @thaddeuslarimer5703 2 роки тому +2

      My thoughts exactly, Papa Smurf!

    • @RalphSampson...
      @RalphSampson... 2 роки тому

      @@ricksanchez3176
      "Pliny"? What is that?! You must mean "plenty".

    • @JesusTorres-xz5jt
      @JesusTorres-xz5jt 2 роки тому +2

      WOW ...we have ancient history scholars and grammar teachers watching Escencial Craftsman Channel...they must be bored and had nothing else to do.

  • @ilovecats8155
    @ilovecats8155 2 роки тому

    My sister lives in Mesa Arizona it was amazing to see your sons Apache storage place I been watching you for years

  • @stevenvanderelst9886
    @stevenvanderelst9886 2 роки тому

    last week I found your you tube video's, and now I'm watching a couple every day. I enjoy them verry much. Thank you. Greetings from Holland

  • @krenwregget7667
    @krenwregget7667 2 роки тому +2

    great video Scott. Your ability to communicate is a real gift to us, thank you.

  • @doaimanariroll5121
    @doaimanariroll5121 2 роки тому +1

    I went 4x4ing with my friend(in his 4x4) a while back and we got a flat by running over a old railway dog. For some silly reason my mate didn’t have a jack. But he had an axe.
    I was so glad I had been shown how to improvise leverage by my my grandad.
    We chopped down a long tree, rolled over a big log, lifted up the corner of the car and changed the tyre.

  • @k.d.8924
    @k.d.8924 2 роки тому +7

    I would say my glaziers bar sees the most use, and the burke bar is the most indispensable. Most of those levers have a workaround, but in my experience there is nothing else that will do the work of a burke bar. I owe you for bringing the existence of that tool to my attention. Thank you Scott..

    • @ClintL63
      @ClintL63 2 роки тому

      I bought one new! I climbed above a 35 ft poured wall set and i heard Tink tink tink! me NEW bar went down to the bottom! I say it funny, but cost me 17 bucks! it is in the Arauco plant in Grayling Mich; its like some sort of monument! LOL!

  • @dakotakosen9597
    @dakotakosen9597 2 роки тому

    I bought a Burke bar because of your videos, best tool ever, used almost daily!

  • @oscara.8176
    @oscara.8176 2 роки тому

    Wow!... What a video... Thanks sir. The one of the door repair you show at beginning still my favorite.

  • @mercMADCommando
    @mercMADCommando 2 роки тому +14

    One thing with the flat bar: if you're using the hook/90° end and it's flexing when pulling the normal way, you can pull inline with the flat section (90° to normal) and it's much more Ridgid that way. Helps a lot with longer/cheaper bars.

    • @bkh1324
      @bkh1324 2 роки тому

      I generally end up prying in this fashion the majority of time I use a flat bar. Mabey it's because I'm on ladders alot. Pulling down instead of pushing away feels safer I reckon.

  • @klmbuilders5385
    @klmbuilders5385 2 роки тому

    You're the reason I have a Burke bar. I saw you using it in another video. Thanks Scott!

  • @ensignj3242
    @ensignj3242 2 роки тому

    I’m a 69 yr old woman and I bought a Burke Bar because of your recommendation. Still haven’t used it but I have it just in case. Glad I bought it.

  • @rd-ch1on
    @rd-ch1on 2 роки тому +21

    I would add the bee keepers bar/ window glazier bar to your list. Excellent multipurpose small pry bar that fits in your tool bag.

    • @krenwregget7667
      @krenwregget7667 2 роки тому +3

      agreed. When I got into finish carpentry and then cabinets, a glazing bar was my go to because it was thin, flat and wouldn't mar the surface of what I was prying on.

    • @thinktank8286
      @thinktank8286 2 роки тому

      Would you have pictures of these tools? Tried a search for "bee keeper bar" came up with nothing.

    • @rd-ch1on
      @rd-ch1on 2 роки тому +2

      @@thinktank8286 do a search for "Richard Tools 10 inch pry bar" . It's 10 inches long x 1.5 inches wide, painted red. Originally they were used by beekeepers but now are also used for a wide variety of things.

    • @jascost
      @jascost 2 роки тому +1

      Agreed. We use them constantly in commercial/retail millwork installs. I actually like the ones they sell in the paint tools section of the orange store.

    • @beekeeperzimmy
      @beekeeperzimmy 2 роки тому

      @@krenwregget7667 try searching hive tool.

  • @charleywalker2982
    @charleywalker2982 Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge and keep your videos coming please, we really appreciate them.

  • @chriswest1996
    @chriswest1996 2 роки тому +1

    Love what you call the "Dig out bar". Not only will it pull a finish nail...it will pull a broken off nail. No head required!

  • @BrittCHelmsSr
    @BrittCHelmsSr 2 роки тому +1

    Great review of bar tools. It really is about using the right tool for the job.
    My father-in-law will be 83 just three days before Christmas this year. He absolutely amazes me with his abilities and work ethic. He is a "work smarter, not harder" sort of guy and three years ago moved out of a 20 acre farmsite with a 40 by 60 shop, with my mother-in-law, to a lot not much bigger than the 2500 square foot two-story house that was on it. I was the benefactor of much of his downsizing of tools and equipment. He still amazes me at the things that he WANTS to do but is smart enough to get his sons and I, who are 25 years his junior, to accomplish on his behalf. Kudos, Allen I. Steele
    I used to watch a DIY show (back when This Old House was about the only option) called Help Around The House which was hosted by a fellow named Henry Harrison. He demonstrated one of those slide-handled nail removers, and I knew immediately that I needed on. It took some time to find one, but what a fantastically designed and built vintage tool that is to have in one's collection.

  • @JoeGerossie
    @JoeGerossie 2 роки тому

    Something about listening to this video about bars is soothing

  • @larkin1525
    @larkin1525 2 роки тому +4

    This is definitely one of the most reviews I’ve seen of pry bars

  • @stan525
    @stan525 2 роки тому

    and leverage of thought you seem to have control of. great channel

  • @stevelawton4539
    @stevelawton4539 2 роки тому

    Totally agree with the uses. I've touched all of those bars. The most recent is the Burke Bar and I'm not sure why it took so long to get my hands on one. Those I work with know it's in my truck; typically it's the first leverage tool they ask for. A back saver and helps make the hard labor jobs a little more enjoyable. Keep up the good work.

  • @ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣΟΡΦΑΝΟΥΔΑΚΗΣ-σ1ι

    Every time I'm watching your video is a pleasure! Thank you for the knowledge...

  • @johnelliott4320
    @johnelliott4320 2 роки тому +1

    I am a crane operator by trade, the company I work for we do a lot of tilt wall precast, the brick layers use burke bars all day long to adjust the panels I think about this channel every time I see them pull the burke bats off the truck in the morning

  • @MAGAMAN
    @MAGAMAN 2 роки тому +13

    I used a 4 foot pry bar to move my entire floating laminate floor over enough to slide it under the door jamb so the transition strip would cover it. It moved the floor plus my 200+ lbs. while I was standing on it.

  • @ericcommarato7727
    @ericcommarato7727 2 роки тому

    I have all of these and use them often...the Burke is my favorite.

  • @donmunro7568
    @donmunro7568 2 роки тому +1

    I have been doing flooring for 33 years and one time we had to move a large fire safe. It was so heavy it bent the tongue of a stand up dolly. I came up with the idea to role it on wood broom handles.

  • @AlanTheBeast100
    @AlanTheBeast100 2 роки тому +5

    A small "Lever Bar Scraper" should be in all tool bags. Indeed I keep a few around the house. Small, light, thin and useful for all kinds of situations when doing maintenance, paint prep work, furniture repair, etc. and so on. Tremendous leverage for levelling cabinets (lift corner, adjust screw foot) and so on. Or as a wedge to hold something spread while setting another part. (This is a smaller and thinner version of what you call a "flat bar" or "door bar"). Has a decent scraper on one end too.

  • @69adrummer
    @69adrummer 2 роки тому +1

    Man, it might be a great day after all, starting with a video from E.C.!!

  • @tmeinc
    @tmeinc Рік тому

    I once bought a slide hammer nail puller from an old Mainer who called it a Nail Outner.

  • @warrenmichael918
    @warrenmichael918 2 роки тому +1

    I feel like this video was only made just to show off that Burke Bar,,,,and i approve!!

  • @HazItMade
    @HazItMade 2 роки тому

    EXCELLENT presentation, Scott! AND, what most people don't know, is that the mechanical advantage is also an exact science. Children learn from the teeter-totter that they can play with dad on one side and them on the other if the distance from the fulcrum is correct.
    I taught this to my boys when they were still young. Papa weighed 250 and their combined weights totalled 125. My eldest was maybe 9 or 10 and he did the math that I had to be 3 ft from the fulcrum and they had to be 6 ft. 125 lbs x 6 ft = 250 lbs x 3 ft.
    Knowing how much the object you want to move weighs will tell you how long your pry bar needs to be (assuming you know your own weight). 2,000 lbs x .08 ft (1 inch) vs. 250 lbs x 5ft. My 2,500 ft lbs wins!

  • @tillerjets
    @tillerjets 2 роки тому +1

    I am not a carpenter, but an excavation guy. I’d like to add to this list a digging bar, also known as a Fresno bar. Imperative for underground utility work and so many other things. From prying up cut asphalt, sending gasket jointed pipe home, digging in hard ground, lifting manhole lids or storm crates, or repairing equipment. Everyone needs a good 5’ digging bar in their collection.

  • @walterbordett2023
    @walterbordett2023 2 роки тому

    Stealth and guile beat youth and strength. I need to get me a Burke Bar and one of those die bars with the nice handle.
    I have a favorite Estwing door bar that is about 35 years old. The bar is not flat in the handle section; it is half-moon shaped so it is more rigid than most door bars. It is ground with a good long taper at both ends so it fits under work better than most current door bars. For finish demo and repair I find a lot of use for a 2 1/2 inch rigid scraper (used to burn off paint) ground on one side. I use it as a pry bar alone or using it under a door bar with a pair of large diagonal cutters or end nippers to pry out nails...It is fabulous for removing baseboard or molding from a wall without damaging either material.

  • @BrianHolcombewoodworker
    @BrianHolcombewoodworker Рік тому

    This is such an excellent video. Thank you for sharing your experience.

  • @billhigdon9104
    @billhigdon9104 2 роки тому

    first ,i hope we all have 15 + yrs left to work. a few yrs back u recommended the burk bar and it has been the best investment ive made . im 76 and had to move a set of step, could not have done it without it. this summer i am going to move another set of steps. your videos are enjoyable and educational to watch, thanks again and god bless.

  • @rjtumble
    @rjtumble 2 роки тому

    I had forgotten about the 2x4 lift video, that was an awesome trick for using leverage.

  • @rgbrown90
    @rgbrown90 2 роки тому

    The Burke bar has saved loads of time for me hooking up trailers

  • @misplacedhillbilly7594
    @misplacedhillbilly7594 Рік тому

    I do mostly repair and refurbish work on mobile homes for a mortgage company. My most used pry tools are flat trim/moulding bars. The next for me would be the door bar. If you do allot of removing and replacing of trim work a set of flat trim bars is essential imho.

  • @choimdachoim9491
    @choimdachoim9491 2 роки тому +1

    It's funny how something so simple is so essential...basically different versions of a lever. You covered lots of detailed uses. Great lesson.

  • @timothylewis90
    @timothylewis90 2 роки тому +4

    Ah, I fondly reflect back on my first pry tool, the flat head screw driver 🙂

    • @ethanheyne
      @ethanheyne 2 роки тому +3

      On a whim, I got a massive flathead screwdriver from Harbor Fright. I've never used it as a screwdriver, but it's a great lever or pick! The kids use it as a sword occasionally.

  • @meenishal
    @meenishal 2 роки тому

    Brilliant video as always

  • @charliekingpin8568
    @charliekingpin8568 2 роки тому +1

    Your right on with this if mostly over looked but if you know the time and effort you can save is amazing one got one bar more than me :)

  • @poppopsworkshop
    @poppopsworkshop 2 роки тому +1

    Love your channel and message. I believe it was Archimedes and not Aristotle that talked about leverage. Could be wrong though

  • @SebKrause661
    @SebKrause661 2 роки тому

    G'day, a young 26yrs here. Recently bought a felling lever with a cant hook (Arborist by trade). Used almost daily, being used as intended, felling lever, cant hook for rolling logs. But it sure comes in handy everywhere else. Amazing what leverage can do and how much less force and strain is put on your body. From mechanic to arborist I've already figured out undue stress on your body takes its toll, so doing my best to work smarter and harder without wearing me out. Cheers from Aus 🇦🇺🦘

  • @debluetailfly
    @debluetailfly 2 роки тому

    My favorite bars are the small restorer's catspaws with a thin flat end. Best thing for trim and mouldings. A little larger, I love the Tove bars. I haven't had much luck with my Crescent; maybe I have tried to use it on too large of nails? A plier like tool called the Extractor is often used. For small finish nails, an old pair of hand forged nippers that were my grandfathers work wonders.
    Looking forward to years more of videos, if I last as long as you do.

  • @Gravitycrazy
    @Gravitycrazy Рік тому

    Good picks for sure, though instead of a simple flat bar I'd use a wonder bar. Stanley makes a great one. There's a rounded portion a half circle used for leverage and the flat of the bar is of set around 25-30 degrees really good for getting more leverage on a wide area if you can't get something like a J bar in it

  • @missionDan
    @missionDan 2 роки тому

    I have a burke bar in the uk because of you. It is a tool every man should have

  • @njc1205
    @njc1205 2 роки тому +2

    The slide hammer nail puller was one of the standard issue tools in the US ARMY Carpenter Toolset usually issued 1 each to a Company Headquarters and kept by the Supply Sergeant until needed. I suspect I've had to inventory that item more than I've seen one actually used for it's intended purpose.

  • @jonathanmoody6951
    @jonathanmoody6951 2 роки тому

    I use a roofing scraper for flooring pull up. Luan comes out in almost one piece with the old floor. Osb or plywood subfloor is also possible.

  • @PGGraham
    @PGGraham 2 роки тому +9

    I love all of these, but would add a Richardson bar. It looks like a half size, much thinner, flatter door or wonder bar. The long side is pretty wide and sharp though. Great for pulling baseboard or other trim without damaging it. My tile setter uses one for popping tiles as well.

    • @briantaylor9266
      @briantaylor9266 2 роки тому +2

      Agree 100%! I use my Richard Tools pry bar more than my Wunderbar. Also known as a hive tool, because beekeepers use them.

  • @Comm0ut
    @Comm0ut Рік тому

    You can afford a firemans Halligan or Pro Bar and might enjoy one of the custom tools like the wedges and or sledge hammer with mating bracket. The design of the Halligan, Pro Bar etc is amazingly versatile which is why the pros prefer them to most plain bars. Needless to say they are FAST in the right hands (videos of bar use and breaching are worth a watch. I don't do enough demo in crippled retirement to buy new but may anyway for giggles.

  • @mikekisch5563
    @mikekisch5563 2 роки тому

    great tip i could have used a burke bar setting the concrete panels for a house im building.

    • @rd-ch1on
      @rd-ch1on 2 роки тому

      What kinof house are you building?
      I built my house tilt up

    • @mikekisch5563
      @mikekisch5563 2 роки тому

      @@rd-ch1on thats cool i built mine tilt up with rocks embedded

  • @stevechmelar8569
    @stevechmelar8569 Рік тому

    The voice of experience ... thank you !-)

  • @HogshooterHotrods
    @HogshooterHotrods 2 роки тому

    Awesome wisdom shared in this one! Work smart and carry a burke bar in the truck!!

  • @briantaylor9266
    @briantaylor9266 2 роки тому +3

    I have one of those slide hammer nail pullers, and everything you say is true. One caveat, though. It's custom made for pinching the skin on your hand!

    • @Sagern234
      @Sagern234 2 роки тому

      The slide on mine always tends to find the webbing between fingers, while carrying...

  • @bigwave_dave8468
    @bigwave_dave8468 Рік тому

    Also, I have another pry-bar that's a cats-paw on one end and a wide fairly thin curved lever for pulling finish nails - it's a Japanese tool and incredibly useful for not marring delicate molding and it's not as destructive against drywall. In addition, I use a beefier shingle ripper which is non-flexible iron, about 18" with L-foot on one end and angled thinner wedge-shaped end sort of like your blue-bar). This very good for popping heavier baseboard moldings in addition to ripping shingle nails under a course of shingles.

  • @frogsurfer4403
    @frogsurfer4403 2 роки тому

    Another great video. Not a pry bar but along the same spirit as the smaller nail pullers, I like a pair of front nippers for grabbing and pulling fasteners under certain circumstances. Keep up the good work brother!

  • @DewaltFanboy
    @DewaltFanboy 2 роки тому

    Cats paw is my go to in so many scenarios. Amazing tool

  • @yak9147
    @yak9147 2 роки тому

    Great video, on leverage and bars. Something to add is when prizing something , two levers work well to spread the load if you don't want damage, you can get a kind of ratcheting effect. Also sometimes the first bar will, just get something up enough to get the second under.

  • @Tractor_101
    @Tractor_101 2 роки тому +1

    The Johnson bar is also a great bar to have with the cape abilities of being able to lift and roll around very heavy objects.

  • @freohr16
    @freohr16 11 місяців тому

    Archimedes had the lever say-so, not Aristotle. Love the practicality of this knowledge, though Scott. Thank you!

  • @Bankhead49
    @Bankhead49 2 роки тому

    I always keep a flat bar, cats paw and thanks to you a Burke bar in the truck at all times

  • @flnthrn2
    @flnthrn2 2 роки тому

    3:50
    Ain't no hardware I've been in has got one of those.
    I wish they did. i would love to have one.

  • @asfdoth
    @asfdoth 2 роки тому

    Perhaps others have already noted, but I believe the quote “Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world." is attributed to Archimedes (287-212BC). He postdated Aristotle (384-322BC) by 35 or so years. Both great thinkers, no doubt!

  • @YerUncleWillie
    @YerUncleWillie 2 роки тому

    Crescent still makes a 19' nail puller -56. For sale at Amazon for $30

  • @Brandon-lv7ec
    @Brandon-lv7ec 2 роки тому

    I just bought a big pee vee for framing and have found so many uses for in a very short time, next investment will probably be a Burke bar!

  • @chrisbaldwin7734
    @chrisbaldwin7734 Рік тому

    I did millwork for close to 20 years. We had a sliding nail puller like the one you showed. It was always a badge of shame to have to get it. I found one at a flea market a couple of months ago. It was $12.00. Nobody knew what it was. I snagged it. Not that I'd ever need it, but I might have a coworker that might. Great tool, especially for a set finish nail.

  • @ramosel
    @ramosel 2 роки тому +1

    I was somewhat amazed... but not really surprised that Andrew Camarata was able to break the Burke bar you sent him.

  • @richardmccann4815
    @richardmccann4815 2 роки тому

    I built my first digging bar from 1" pipe and a nice half of a leaf spring! Worked so well, I made several more, never got into production, though. Still have most of them, dug the prototype out of the ground a few years back, made with hefty rebar, I didn't like it much.

  • @banjotramp1
    @banjotramp1 2 роки тому

    Cats paw has a dedicated spot in my tool belt forever. I never saw a burke bar around here, but it looks like just the thing I needed last summer to move big heavy farm machines and the grain dryer around. My go to bar for decades has been a very simple flat bar, about 18" long with a hex handle (sorta like a big cold chisel). The hex end you hit with a hammer driving the flat end into the work. It can get under shingles, hold doors, pull nails, tiles, trim and baseboard with minimal damage, and every thing else I have thrown at it. I wish I could show a picture here.
    The idea is to be smarter than the heavy thing, not stronger (unless you are stronger), but at 70yr/145 lb smarter is def the way to go.

  • @DavidtheSwarfer
    @DavidtheSwarfer 2 роки тому +1

    I really need a Burke bar, none to be had in Africa so I will have to make it. Will a bit of leaf spring do for the working end?

  • @wendelmsall2716
    @wendelmsall2716 2 роки тому

    Thank you for another great video. I just turned 68 and intend on working till I’m at least 80.

  • @WayneSmith-yf3fg
    @WayneSmith-yf3fg 2 роки тому +3

    I tell young people that come on the job site all the time "You'll learn the real uses of simple machines taught in school". We used to use an 8' oak mover's lever dolly to lift thousands of pounds and move them in the factory.

  • @biblejournaling66
    @biblejournaling66 2 роки тому +8

    Great video but don't forget the Johnson bar for really big stuff. Basically a longer Burk bar with a pair of wheels acting as a fulcrum and makes it easy to move.

  • @tylerkurfees4762
    @tylerkurfees4762 2 роки тому

    Burke bars are amazing. The tilt wall erector on my job, use them to shift the 90,000lb wall sections exactly where they want them before detaching from the crane and bracing them off. Four guys with two bars. It’s a sight to see.

  • @jmoman5356
    @jmoman5356 2 роки тому

    I remember using a flat bar to scrap up black glue or something that was under carpet as a kid. It was on top of an actually decent wood floor that was sanded and stained and looks nice to this day.

  • @mvblitzyo
    @mvblitzyo 2 роки тому

    I am an arborist but I have all these pry bars for all the reasons you mention ..

  • @probuilder961
    @probuilder961 2 роки тому

    I use a Deck Wrecker bar specifically built for removing wood decking. Has a fiberglass handle with large steel fangs that straddle the joist & it's 180° reversible for different situations.

  • @JK-Handyman
    @JK-Handyman 2 роки тому

    Wow, you plan to work until your 80 years old! that's very inspiring.

  • @NSResponder
    @NSResponder 2 роки тому +1

    Have you done a video on rigging ropes and pulleys?

  • @MrLaw-pn7ce
    @MrLaw-pn7ce 11 місяців тому

    Best advise ever.

  • @cheyennereynoso4116
    @cheyennereynoso4116 2 роки тому

    That was a good lesson.

  • @fogan333
    @fogan333 2 місяці тому

    Archimedes said the quoted ΔΟΣ ΜΟΙ ΠΑ ΣΤΩ ΚΑΙ ΤΑΝ ΓΑΝ ΚΙΝΑΣΩ, that you mentioned concerning leverage. Thanks any way for your shows, as I am a tool lover too!!!

  • @CrimeVid
    @CrimeVid 2 роки тому +2

    Any bar is better than no bar ! I must have a dozen different types of bar. I always have one with me. Personally I like the flat bar that does not have a knuckle (vaughn bar) just a right angle. Most liked by me is the little Japanese “Shark” bar, but only the genuine article, so thin and so tough that it will get in anywhere with a light tap, I often use mine to open a gap without damage to get a bigger bar in. I don’t own a burke bar ! I still like the old fashioned five and a half foot crow bar and a heavy one at that, the weight helps !!

  • @LetsBuildAHouse
    @LetsBuildAHouse 2 роки тому

    Very helpful! Thanks for this!

  • @Fr3sh-Kush
    @Fr3sh-Kush Рік тому

    How hard is the steel on Burke bar? I used 2 different brands from my job but idk which brand is which. Both slightly different but spray painted by someone due to rust. One had a good springy snap , tiny bjt of flex in the blade which had its uses, but the other burke bar, had a less curved blade, was much heavier, harder steal, didnt have very much flex in the blade or handle. Was alot better for moving bundles of rebar and prying forms in very tight spaces