Tips of the Week is our weekly peek at some of the best making tips, tricks, and recommendations we’ve discovered in our travels. Check in every Friday to see what we’ve discovered. And we want to hear from you. Please share your tips, shortcuts, best practices, and tall shop tales in the comments below and we might use your tip in a future column.
Tape Tab Battery Pulls
In Donald Bell’s Maker Update from last week, in a review of EBL 18650 rechargeable batteries, he shows a little battery access trick that everyone should know. If your battery holder doesn’t have a built-in pull-tab for removing the batteries, you can make one by simply wrapping a short length of tape around the battery.
Baking Pan Hacking

Adding a Keyholed Ruler to Your Bench

Always Start with the Simplest Solution
In Andy Birkey’s latest On a Shop Stool vlog, he tells the story of his home furnace dying and him immediately jumping into problem-solving mode, calling an HVAC guy, and spending some time scratching his head before he thought to check the thermostat only to discover that it had been turned off. I had a similar embarrassing experience recently. I was throwing a party and setting up my sound system in the living room. My Harmon Kardon speaker system wasn’t powering up. I and a friend who works in TV and radio spent way too much time trying to troubleshoot the problem and were about to scramble to find another set of powered speakers when I finally discovered that the volume knob on the sub-woofer was also a push-button power switch. Who knew? These are painful reminders of that tech support adage of always first asking if the computer is plugged in and powered on. But, even beyond the “Is it on?” first question, there is a greater point here about always trying to find the simplest solution to a problem first and then working out from there.
Squiggly Line and Fingernail Sanding
In more Andy Birkey tip news, in his latest “Gimme a Minute” video, he shares this trick I’ve seen woodworkers often use. When sanding two surfaces to the same level, draw a squiggly line across both. Then sand across both until all of the pencil marks are sanded away. As you go, you can also test for a smooth, level transition by gently scraping your fingernails against the transition. If it’s smooth, your fingers will not catch on the seam between the two pieces.
Buying Cheap Hardware and Upgrading It

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