![]() |
Best adjustable wrench?
After watching this, had to run to my rollaway...whew! All my craftsman are the old made in USA stuff. Anyway, interesting video...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyOd05PUix4 |
I have two of the Irwin adjustable wrenches. I bought them when I broke a hydraulic line on an excavator down inside a woods I was working in. Sadly I lost all of my old school Craftsman wrenches in crawl spaces :( . My favorite by far is an old Diamond adjustable wrench I've had for over 25 years.
|
I have a few really old Diamond Tool and Horseshoe tools. The adjustable wrenches are bulletproof.
|
Snap On. I've had my 12" for 40 years and it's still the best one I have. Of course I try not to use an adjustable wrench or the open end of a combination wrench if possible.
|
I have a few old made in USA adjustable wrenches. They don't rank space in my toolbox. I hang them on a nail in a cabinet. I use them mostly for my propane bottle. I have a fixed wrench for that as well, but I never remember the exact size. It is a large nut, so no worries about rounding it off.
I have open end wrenches from 6mm to 38mm, so adjustable is a rare use item. |
Quote:
I have a big Harbor Freight wrench that's 15 years old. I'm thinking in the 2' long range. I use it for steering tie rod work. Not much is unmovable with it. However, if the truth be told, it's the torch that does the real work if things get tough. |
Not cheap, but these Knipex have replaced adjustable wrenches for me (in most cases)
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1636586044.jpg |
The adjustable wrench section in my toolbox.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1636600014.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1636600014.jpg |
^^^How did you bend the handle? ;)
I've always liked the black finish on an adjustable wrench. Looks more purposeful. I have 3 that are black. |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
Then we gotta get into those fancy high fallutin open end wrenches that are designed to sort of ratchet. |
Quote:
Always a situation though where an adjustable wrench is a good choice. |
I love project farm! His testing is intelligent, innovative and best of all, anal. Love this guy.
I have an old USA made 8 or 9" Craftsman adjustable and it's a decent wrench. Don't use it all that often but it works well. the best adjustable wrench ever made? 15" Craftsman, hands down. These things are precision, nearly zero slop or play and are stronger than anything you'll be loosening. I have 2 of them, best possible wrenches for all 911 oil lines. They seem to grip tighter on torque if that's possible, they are hard to get off after loosening. Rolling the knurled adjuster is practically sensual. No better wrench of any kind for handling large nuts. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1636669787.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1636669787.jpg |
Quote:
|
^^^
Yeah! But can ya use it as a hammer? That's the true test of quality :) That and putting a 2' pipe on the end because you just can't get enough leverage to break something loose without it. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
And since I don't see any marks on the side I can only surmise that they have never been used as a hammer. I think that's a flagrant foul or something. ^^^ Strike that! Upon further review, I can clearly see marks on the side which would imply that it has indeed been used as a hammer. Shaun will not be charged a timeout. |
Open end wrenches are weaker than box end, sure. But pro mechanics use good tools, and everybody prefers to use the box end to break a fastener loose. Adjustable wrenches are, generally sort of crap. It would indeed be nice to have a high quality one. Something made by the Germans.
|
^^^
Or in this case, one made by Milwaukee (I think it tested the best didn't it?) And ya can't use an end wrench as a hammer... unless it's at least a 1 5/8 or better. Those make a good hammer. |
I've found the Japanese mfg'd Top 8" adjustable to be excellent.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1636683210.jpg |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 07:42 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website