Garage Gazette
TOOLS AND THE SHOP => MECHANIC HAND TOOLS WE USE => Topic started by: goodfellow on October 23, 2018, 11:58:09 AM
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My wife and I cleaned up and purged the basement clutter this past weekend to get ready for the holiday season (i.e. get ready to accumulate more junk), and she stumbled across these sets. US made Craftsman polished line wrench sets nicely tucked away in their original boxes. Yes, I bought them and forgot about them because they were supposed to be Christmas presents for some family members back in 2010-11.
I was renovating the garage in those days and had my tools spread all over hence it probably made sense to put these in a "safe" place. Problem is I bought them earlier in the year and promptly forgot about them. Nice wrenches and still one of the better designs that they sold. I have these wrenches in my own collection and although very good, they are not as good as my older Snap-On line wrenches -- the Snap-On models don't spread one iota and are very precise.
(http://i357.photobucket.com/albums/oo18/goodfellow_2004/PICT0372.jpg)
(http://i357.photobucket.com/albums/oo18/goodfellow_2004/PICT0373.jpg)
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So the tips do spread? They look fairly beefy.
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I have these. I had thought they were made SK.
I have some Snap-on as well and GF is right you can not get a better line wrench than the Snap-ons. But the Craftsman are good wrenches and have worked well for me.
So the tips do spread? They look fairly beefy.
I believe under enough stress any open end will tend to spread a bit. But has not been an issue.
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.......I have these. I had thought they were made SK.
I believe you are correct Steve -- SK was the OEM for this bunch.
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That's definitely a surprise.
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My inventor buddy told me the steel Snap on uses in its wrenches is quite hard and won't spread. If it does, it snaps.
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My inventor buddy told me the steel Snap on uses in its wrenches is quite hard and won't spread. If it does, it snaps.
I readily believe that Phil. I have regular Craftsman, older MAC and MATCO, the C-Man Pros above, Snap-On, and an extensive set of older GRANCO SAE versions. The only ones that have never rounded off a line fitting are the Snap-On and GRANCO wrenches.
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... If it does, it snaps.
Of course it does that's why they call it Snap-on.
OK, I'll go stand stand in the corner.
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Jackpot in the basement!
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For the small price of three firstborn and a year of payyments the Wurth offset double flex end line wrenches are great.
No stretching and that typical top end Japanese tool build the mostly seem worth the price once you have them. I sold off all others after these came home. and I had three snappers too.
the flex on the ends makes them go over or under near all obstacles where I used them and it was hard to go back to regular types. I do wish I needed them more on the job.