The tool I want to cover in today's Toolbox Tuesday, the Fein MultiMaster, is what I like to refer to as a "wonder" tool. What I mean by using the word "wonder" is not typical of what you would normally think of. When I say "wonder," I mean:
- Before you own it you wonder why you or anyone would possibly need this niche tool.
- As you research it or stumble on it for your needs, you realize it's one of those infomercial "all in wonder" type tools. You know, the ones where the Sham-Wow guy shows you how it does 9,000 things and there's no way you can live another day without it. But it's not a cheap plastic piece of crap that will break when you use it. It's a Fein tool, which tends to have a great reputation, albeit pricey.
- Then when you finally decide you absolutely need it, after working on project after project where you realize how handy it would be, you wonder how you can justify the cost to yourself.
- Then you wonder how you can possibly convince your spouse that it's not only a reasonable idea, it's a good one too.
- After you purchase it and use the tool for the project you needed it on, you wonder how you conducted life without it prior to ownership.
- Finally, once you're done with your first project, you wonder where else you can use this tool in your house, both because you need to live up to the purchase justification, and because it's simply a versatile tool.
See? It's a "wonder" tool.
Beyond being a wonder tool, the MultiMaster is a simple variable speed oscillating multi-use tool that acts as anything from a sander of wood to cutter of metal, and everything in between. We purchased this tool about five years ago after a contractor broke a piece of our siding corner board (sore subject there and a completely incompetent contractor, but I'll fill you in on that story some other time).
After breaking it, the contractor simply tacked the broken piece of Azek board back in place and called it a day. I was furious to say the least. I had installed and perfectly caulked that board the year before, and there was no way I would be leaving it looking like crap. Can you see how horrible it is? Exposed nail heads, bad patch job with caulk, even the siding was removed and then poorly put back in place. This is "professional"? I think I'll stick with DIY.
I knew I would need to somehow cut the now jagged board's broken piece at an angle to fit a new piece below it, but I needed to do it without disturbing the siding around it, sparing the Tyvek and tar paper behind it from damage, and leaving a nice clean cut with overhang angle for the replacement piece. Unfortunately, the circular saw, plunge router, sawzall, jigsaw, and pretty much anything else I could think of would have done more harm than good on the siding.
I had been looking for a good excuse to buy an oscillating cutting tool for quite some time, and this opportunity seemed to be as good a time as any. I picked up the basic tool package with a handful of attachments and got to work.
Using one of the standard saw toothed cutting attachments, I was able to easily cut through only the board I needed, and it left a pretty good cut. I was then able to cut a new piece at with the proper angle I had cut (since you shouldn't just do a butt joint on a vertical exterior board) and attached the new piece below the corner board and called it a day.
The MultiMaster had worked great, and I had visions of all of the amazingly useful things I could do with it. Since that first project I've used the MultiMaster for dozens of other minor and major tasks throughout the house. From cutting out sections of hard wood flooring or baseboards, to sanding intricate details of furniture.
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