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Gentlemen, Change your Sockets!
If you can't find your 10mm socket....just convert to a 13/32 sae socket. :D
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go to Amazon to buy one..or a few.
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Harbor Freight still had that set on sale last week.
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Just ordered a whole new set of Torx sockets today to make work on the Cayenne easier.
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^^^ What brand did you buy?
I’ve never needed them before, but after working on my 330, I bought a set of E Torx. |
These ones. I liked that they are longer. Getting my door panel off recently was a challenge pushing the socket body into the holes for handle and support. Good reviews too.
DISEN 7PCS 3/8” Drive Extra Long Torx Star Bit Socket Set | 7 Piece | T25 to T60 | |
Since all my "craftsperson" 1/2" drive regular metric sockets were 12 point, I filled in with a set from Tekton a few months ago...
https://www.tekton.com/1-2-inch-drive-6-point-socket-set-shd92002 If all their other sockets are made this well, I can say they are very well made. Can't really say why anybody would want a 10mm in 1/2" drive though... |
I lost a 10mm socket the other day and went to replace it. The guy at Repco offered me a ten pack of 10mm sockets. It looks some people are even worse than me about losing them.
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Thye need to make sockets with a flat on one side so they don't roll. That would stop all this 10 mm nonsense. Probably save the planet.
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Milwaukee socket sets...designed anti-roll. Can buy 'em through Home Depot. Made in Taiwan. (edit) This should get you started... https://www.homedepot.com/p/Milwaukee-3-8-in-Drive-SAE-Metric-Ratchet-and-Socket-Mechanics-Tool-Set-56-Piece-with-PACKOUT-22-in-Tool-Box-48-22-9008-48-22-8424/314981506 |
In 1967 while working at Ace Cycle World in Chicago bought my first set of metric sockets, SK Wayne. The 10mm is still here though the 13mm has fractured at all 6 corners.
Rich |
^^^ I still have mine also....but the ratchet won't hold onto a socket anymore.
I should get it fixed. Never lost the 10mm. I think mine was 1970 |
Kinda sad that SK was bought by a Chinese company...
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In 1970 when I started driving I bough a set of Fuller sockets and a ratchet with two extensions and a spark plug wrench on a plastic case. The chrome is worn off of the ratchet from getting set down on the concrete. Fuller was made in Japan high quality tools.
I still have the entire set, and I have never lost a socket. I did break the 14 mm by being lazy and using the 14mm on my impact wrench and promptly split it. My go to sockets right now are those sockets. I don't think I have ever lost a socket, but I only work on my cars. So no chance of them getting left in a customer car. |
Where would I get a replacement for the head on my S-K ratchet. The ball bearing won't hold onto a socket anymore. It's 50 years old and I would like to get it into useable condition again.
Or is it something I could fix by taking it apart? |
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Let's put it this way...I see no need to toss old tools that still function well in order to buy new ones. |
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That ratchet has never needed a rebuild, and no standard chrome 14 mm socket is going to stand up to an impact wrench on a tight nut. I used my impact socket, and took the nut right off. |
My 50 year old S-K ratchet has a better 'feel' than any of the newer ones that I have bought.
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Glen, that's a coincidence...my 1st set of metric sockets are also Japanese, bought from a now defunct yamaha/honda dealer back in the 60's. Still have the sockets and the metal tray they came in. "Truecraft" again...7-19mm no skips. Then price still written on the tray..$6.95. Thinking I must have bought the ratchet at the same time. Memories of my Yamaha dirt bike years... |
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