Ready to use I thought this would save a lot of time. I found that the set screw holding the handle was cross-threaded, so I turned the set screw with glee as I put the handle in place. I was impressed when I first started using the tool, but that later changed. I found that when trying to remove the fins from both ends with the tool only half used, the cheap thin-walled tubing on the back of the angle began to snap. It was very frustrating. For something that had a heavy corner iron and a heavy iron in the front to go cheap and used cheap thin walled tubing for the back that carries most of the load, that's terrible. Would it be much more expensive to use a heavy black pipe in the rear? Here's what I had to do to keep using it. When the pipe started to break, I took my black pipe handle and hammered it into the thin-walled pipe to give it more rigidity. Then I cut off the nut for the set screw, drilled through the other side of the tube and inserted the pin.
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