Has a clamping bracket to slip under trim orbonnthe edge of a door pocket
That's a great idea, thanks
No problems God knows what happened to the predictive text there ..
My mate has one and can say for sure it works well he used his at a RTC to gain access to a car and make it safe and got a pat on the back from the ambulance crew that were 3 cars behind him who were radioing it in as he put the cars handbrake on and shut the ignition off as the car was revving full tilt
If your roughing it, Your doing it wrong
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
Well Mrs a got her new car tonight the "yes love you've got plenty of fuel in it " within half a mile of leaving garage orange fuel light came on
More to my surprise as I was roughing in her dash camera the first three things she put In was the fire extinguisher in its velcro mounting sleeve , fak and high vis jacket
If your roughing it, Your doing it wrong
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
One question . I've seen it mentioned several times , a folding shovel. Why a folding shovel? It's a car so why not carry a proper full sized one . There's the space to carry it and should it be needed a full sized one will do a much better job.
grenfell wrote: ↑Thu May 06, 2021 6:33 pm
One question . I've seen it mentioned several times , a folding shovel. Why a folding shovel? It's a car so why not carry a proper full sized one . There's the space to carry it and should it be needed a full sized one will do a much better job.
I've used a folding shovel to dig a car out of a drift, the plastic ones are great...... For fresh snow. But an exercise in frustration if its a two day old ploughed heap
The military folders are all much of a muchness in that the handle is too short and the head too small,
even a mini-shovel would be better.
I'll probably be putting the steel shafted builder's shovel in the boot.... It may even live there permanently as the car is a Volvo and has a boot like a warehouse
jennyjj01 wrote:"I'm not in the least bit worried because I'm prepared: Are you?"
Londonpreppy wrote: At its core all prepping is, is making sure you're not down to your last sheet of loo roll when you really need a poo.
grenfell wrote: ↑Thu May 06, 2021 6:33 pm
One question . I've seen it mentioned several times , a folding shovel. Why a folding shovel? It's a car so why not carry a proper full sized one . There's the space to carry it and should it be needed a full sized one will do a much better job.
Depends on the car a super mini or a big old defender / estate car....
I carry a folding mod entrenching tool all year round and a avalanche shovel in winter ... I don't plan on getting stuck but it beats using your hands
The entrenching tool is handy as you can use it as a a hooked scraper .. if your bogged a decent garden spade will be better for digging
If your roughing it, Your doing it wrong
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
grenfell wrote: ↑Thu May 06, 2021 6:33 pm
One question . I've seen it mentioned several times , a folding shovel. Why a folding shovel? It's a car so why not carry a proper full sized one . There's the space to carry it and should it be needed a full sized one will do a much better job.
For me it's just practical to have a fold up one. I just have a folding one as it's compact and can fit into small spaces where as an ordinary shovel would move about more in the back and get in the way. I keep most of my estate boot space free for the dog and have my car preps in a large holdall bag in the boot - the folding shovel fits in there nicely.
"Today is the tomorrow that you worrried about yesterday" - unknown
"Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast" - Red Dwarf
(Area 3)
Thanks for the replies with regards to the folding shovels although i still not totally convinced by the space saving argument. I suppose i'm over blessed with spades and shovels as i have six in the van. Standard shovel , standard spade , narrow short handled spade , copy of a military folding spade , a long handled pointed shovel and a long handled spade with extra langs welded on to give me a good if heavy levering spade. There's also a spade strapped to the side of one of my trailers too. I suppose i've had regular tools before the folding compact type and never found a problem to put a spade or shovel in the car rather than buying a folder just to carry about. Equally i suppose there might be an element of frugality there. The folder i have in the van now is one i acquired on a clearance , needed unseizing but is fine now and useful for use in compact spaces but i'd dig out ( pun intended) the full size jobby if confronted with a snowdrift or deep mud. One thing that always sticks in my mind is looking at British troops especially from the second world war. They all had entrenching tools but also a full size spade or pick shoved through their webbing although that might just be a comment on the efficiency of the 37 pattern tool.
Remember that folding shovels were designed to be space saving and carried by troops, a full size spade has a massive mechanical advantage over a folder.
Richard
South Wales UK
Retired, spending the children's inheritance.