if you answer i don't need the typical gith clothes are not cheap i know that i just need an answer for my question.all my clothes are so worned (sorry for my english) and i have nothing to wear i am not in the best possition to buy clothes right now but i need something to wear and because in my country we don't have many cheap goth stores i buy online.in the moment i need something cheap. please do NOT answer if you can't answer my question thank you and sorry for being rudep.s something like that
Although gloves can help out, I would highly recommend trying to strengthen your fingers. I had some of the same problems when playing college ball, and I simply started doing more exercises to work on my grip and finger strength to solve it. Start by doing forearm strengthening lifts at the gym. Forearm curls and forearm rotations will be a great addition to your bicep workout. Static hanging on pull up bars is another great way to build up your grip, which will in turn strengthen your fingers - do a chin up and hold until COMPLETE muscle failure. Doing finger pushups also will help a great deal, and as you get stronger, you can lessen the number of fingers you use. Also those grip strengthener/forearm exercisers that you can buy will help out. Doing these will solve your problem long term, and prevent pesky and nagging injuries. In the mean time, taping your fingers will help more than any gloves. If necessary, reapply tape during your breaks. Taping and wearing a decent glove will help as well, but as I said, this will be a short term solution, and could lead to a more serious injury. Others have mentioned good glove brands, but if I were you, I'd go look for yourself before you buy any - find something that fits and feels good on you, not something someone else claims to be the best.
may be gas pipe if in attic, better let a pro do this on. Normally water pipes are in ground, crawl spaces, or in between floors.
To properly cut and re-thread steel pipe you need a pipe cutter, pipe threader, and pipe deburrernone of which are cheap. If you know how long a piece you need, have the supply house or home center cut and thread the piece(s) for you. I think Lowes does this for little or no extra cost. If you have a lot of threading to do, try renting the cutter, threader, and de-burrer, plus a pipe vise. [You will also need cutting oil for the threading process.] You then use couplings, not unions, to rejoin the pieces. [Unions are used to join two pipes when you cannot turn one of the pipes because it is already in place.] Use standard forged couplings, not the cheap smooth merchant couplings which often come with pipe lengths. Be sure to use high quality pipe dope to join the pipe/fittings. It comes in tape or brush on types, depending on your preference, the type of pipe, and what the pipe will carry [water, gas, etc.]