@@ignoto82dr Yeah no, i work with this type of stuff, gloves wont help. The sheet metal is 0.2 mm thick. There are cut resistant gloves but they cost more than they are worth.
@@Bloddrake I'm talking about heavy duty, rubber covered, jeans core glove. I mean, sure, they aren't worth nothing when the sheet slide over em cutting em open like butter, but at least you can grab the sheet sideway without fear of cutting your hand with shards and if you bother (to death) yourself to glue each phalanges with a piece of wood (or use a chunk of wood to cover the cutting edge of the sheet) you have some chances
They are all excellent, especially the sheet metal cutter. I am a retired professor turned Habitat electrician and the satisfaction of using tools to make people's homes functional and comfortable is amazing. TYhanks for celebrating these people.
The funniest part is they do that because the shipping company decided it would be cheaper to just force them to do that than repair the warehouse. Which, so far, has only led to a few warehouses exploding because of decaying flammables/fertilizers/explosives.
I used to wrap presents like that when I was 5. Apparently not that funny to the family members that tried to open them and was also busted for wasting tape.
@@SeanPatterson-v9x No he doesn't I've never seen that. If he was indoors doing a residential job then yeah I can see the purpose of having a towel underneath the workspace. Speaking as a high rise cleaner myself he guaranteed just has a handheld mop he uses to wet the windows. Hell, I've positioned the hand mop below the squeegee while doing those exact movements so it catches the drops and then the mop stays wet for the next window.
I worked close with the railroad for over 20 years. Maintenance/repairs, etc...assigned many crews. Everyone could nail that spike just like that. I was always amazed.
@michaelhoudecki3657 Straight downward swipes. Start at the right, swipe down, quick wipe with a cloth diaper (very absorbent, no lint) on just the outside half-inch of the squeegee (do NOT dry the whole squeegee) do the next one, repeat. Finish by throwing the diaper on the end of the pole to dry the edge. Zip, zip, zip. Noticeably faster technique, and no dirty wet edge left behind. But, nowhere near as satisfying to watch.