Earlier this week I needed a project. I have two beautifull grand daughters, and each spring for the last 3 years, Grandpa has added something new to the back yard "play area". So far we have a small slide, a big slide, two swings, and an elevated "playhouse". This year, I decided that a teeter-totter (some call them a see-saw) was in order. I built some handles out of 1" steel tubing I had left over from another project, and thought---I had better plug the ends of those tubes to keep little fingers and nesting wasps out of the handles. I checked around in my "scrap rack" and when nothing there presented itself, I went out to my hot-rod garage. There I found an old set of king-pins of the perfect diameter to make weld in "plugs". I cut one into 4 pieces on my bandsaw, and in so doing, totally destroyed my bi-metal bandsaw blade. Those king-pins were harder than the devils horn!!!! Now I have to go and buy a new blade, and the damned things are $47.00 plus tax. Now everybody is entitled to make a mistake ONCE. No lives were lost, no property was destroyed. But when I called BusyBee to price a new blade the clerk looked it up in his records and reminded me that it was April 11 exactly one year ago that I had bought the current blade.--and then I remembered---I had destroyed the blade previous to that cutting off a bolt which happened to be too long---and was tempered!!! I think from now on, before I cut anything, I will test it like the old time pirates tested a coin to see if it was real gold. I'll bite the damned thing and see if I can leave a tooth impression before I take it to the bandsaw.