Tinker & Torech
Tinker Tinker
Found a heap of scrap metal, thought we could craft a lightweight but sturdy multi‑tool. You think that’s a worthwhile venture or just another needless waste of time?
Torech Torech
If the scrap is solid and you have a clear design, it's a fine use of time. Otherwise, you’ll end up with a dented glorified paperweight and a waste of both metal and your energy. Stick to plans, or just toss it and move on.
Tinker Tinker
Got it, I'll check the material first and sketch a quick layout before I start cutting. No more surprises, just a solid piece of gear.
Torech Torech
Good. Keep the drawings to a single sheet, use the strongest edge as the main frame, and remember: a well‑planned cut is half the work. No surprises, no wasted steel.
Tinker Tinker
Will do, straight‑edge drawings, single sheet, main frame on the strongest edge, clean cuts—no surprises, no waste. Let's get to it.
Torech Torech
Sounds like the kind of disciplined plan that turns scrap into something useful. Just keep the angles tight and the tolerances exact, and you’ll finish faster than a novice can even start. Good luck.
Tinker Tinker
Got it—tight angles, exact tolerances, no fluff. I’ll get this sorted faster than a rookie even gets a grip. Thanks for the heads‑up.