Cool wash bucket

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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 11:58 AM
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From: In a van, down by the river
Cool wash bucket

This is a cool bucket, you can get casters for it at ace hardware that lock in place.

It's like $23 dollars shipped with a Grit Guard.....

http://www.euroworeilly.com/catalog/...products_id=62


May make a nice Christmas gift......
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:02 PM
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From: The Bluegrass State
Originally Posted by Padron
This is a cool bucket, you can get casters for it at ace hardware that lock in place.

It's like $23 dollars shipped with a Grit Guard.....

http://www.euroworeilly.com/catalog/...products_id=62


May make a nice Christmas gift......
Ehh... I'll stick with my standard grit guarded 5-gal buckets. Cheaper to replace when I trip over my clodhoppers and break one of them -- then I still have the grit guard insert to go into my next 'Homer's Bucket' from Home Depot.

-RP-
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:04 PM
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From: In a van, down by the river
I think I'm going to get it, I like the idea of having the casters.....

Did you find any of what you were looking for RP?
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:06 PM
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From: The Bluegrass State
As in the FD? I think I may have... still waiting on emails.

BTW, I've seen a caster-caddy thing for a standard bucket... can't recall where I saw it though.
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:17 PM
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From: In a van, down by the river
Yeah, Hope you get it!!!!

Those bucket caddy's are expensive, I think the cheapest I saw one was like $35.00, I may have to search around again..
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:19 PM
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I want to say the one that I saw was at Lowes... it was more of a cart though. I don't think that the casters locked (which would be an issue for me with a hill driveway).
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:21 PM
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From: In a van, down by the river
Cool, Thanks for the tip, I may stop at Lowes on the way home...
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:23 PM
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Originally Posted by RockPick
I want to say the one that I saw was at Lowes... it was more of a cart though. I don't think that the casters locked (which would be an issue for me with a hill driveway).
x2 my bucket would be 3-4 houses down the road before I could finish hosing down the truck.
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 12:43 PM
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From: In a van, down by the river
Originally Posted by 05supercrew
x2 my bucket would be 3-4 houses down the road before I could finish hosing down the truck.

LOL, that's why you need the locking casters...Or none at all..
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 02:22 PM
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Here is another possible alternative to those expensive bucket dolly's

http://meguiarsonline.com/forums/sho...ighlight=dolly
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 02:38 PM
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Originally Posted by Padron
LOL, that's why you need the locking casters...Or none at all..
To much work lol. The regular pale is just fine. Besides with the casters one of my sons will just think its another ride on toy.
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 05:27 PM
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From: Ky/Va Mountains
Originally Posted by 05supercrew
x2 my bucket would be 3-4 houses down the road before I could finish hosing down the truck.

Same here.
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 05:31 PM
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Originally Posted by RockPick
Ehh... I'll stick with my standard grit guarded 5-gal buckets. Cheaper to replace when I trip over my clodhoppers and break one of them -- then I still have the grit guard insert to go into my next 'Homer's Bucket' from Home Depot.

-RP-
Yo Rock,

Why put your hard-earned buck's in Homer's pocket. Go to your friendly neighborhood Dunkin Donuts and they give away the 5 gallon jelly buckets. (empty, of course)

Just as good as Homer's, if not better.
 
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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 06:24 PM
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Actually... I typically use buckets from Regensis... for those folks within the environmental world, they know what I'm talking about.
 
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