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CHI_Tool&Die

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2021
Messages
1,385
Location
Chicago, IL
Just grabbed some 1/4” extensions from my Matco guy. Just the most used sizes in one set. I don’t have a need for any long extensions and these are supposedly made by AJ right down the street so it’s a double win.

Also grabbed a demo/pry screwdriver set from the last flyer. This set allows me to compare the Matco handles to the Snappy and MAC handles.
 

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Callelle

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2022
Messages
637
Location
Depew NY
I don't want anything to do with Sunex these days and I hesitate to order anything from them because I don't know what I'm actually going to get in return. I really don't like that and I don't think it's fair to the customers either.

They are different tools, depending on COO.
Normally I don't either, I've already sent back stuff because I received something that was Chinese made. I'll keep the 8mm though, only because I'll likely end up losing it anyway.
 

pfbz

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2008
Messages
955
New Tool Tuesday....

A few new pieces of Knipex goodness and a short video showing them along with mod plans for the Porsche 930...

KNIPEX 8" External Circlip Pliers, 49 11 A2
KNIPEX 8" Long Nose S Pliers, 38 81 200 B
KNIPEX 10" Pliers Wrench, 86 032 50

Short Video:

knipex - 1.jpeg

knipex - 2.jpeg

knipex - 3.jpeg
 

Samuel D

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 9, 2019
Messages
638
Wiha extra-long bit holder:

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h19m26.jpg

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h20m01.jpg

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h21m41.jpg

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h28m02.jpg

Polish-made for €12.95 in my local Hornbach? Yes please!

Total length 410 mm, shank length from handle to tip 303 mm, hex bar across flats 6.0 mm.

Initially bought to rebuild a tyre pump, but I often encounter situations where this will be handy. It’s true that removeable bits aren’t ideal in a deep recess for which a long shank is useful, but it’s also true that I can’t afford (money, space) a bunch of extremely long screwdrivers. So this compromise will do for me.
 

ETJ

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 23, 2023
Messages
126
Picked up stuff I ordered from the Q2 flyer from my Snap-on dealer.

310SIMMYA (10mm-19mm 1/2" deep impact sockets), 106IPTMMA (8mm, 10mm, 12mm-15mm 1/4" swivel impact sockets) and SOXRRM704A (6mm-9mm reversible ratcheting wrenches).

IMG_0647.jpg
 

Nobody-named-Olli

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 9, 2025
Messages
1,583
Location
North Rhine-Westphalia; Germany
@ETJ Awesome! That (and the 6mm) are the two sizes I don’t have in my set of the previous generation (SOEXRM) reversible, ratcheting wrenches. Just checked, they are available as singles - now I know what my next order will be.

I don’t know if I’m correct, but I do believe 6 and 7mm were never available in the old style?

Thanks for brining that to my attention!

Kind regards,
Olli
 

mikeinri

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 29, 2019
Messages
8,229
Location
MA
All of these + were included in a pair of boxes I bought over the weekend. Basically free since the boxes only came to $60.

Steve

You should post this haul over here:


Mike
 

INSP380

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2012
Messages
895
Location
Cleveland, Ohio
You should post this haul over here:


Mike
I’d like too but I don’t want to be that guy cross posting all over. Figured this could go into this thread, vintage toolbox, Kennedy … ect. I try to pick one and be done..lol.

Steve
 

Squankum

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 28, 2011
Messages
7,693
Location
Southeast
New Tool Tuesday....

A few new pieces of Knipex goodness and a short video showing them along with mod plans for the Porsche 930...

KNIPEX 8" External Circlip Pliers, 49 11 A2
KNIPEX 8" Long Nose S Pliers, 38 81 200 B
KNIPEX 10" Pliers Wrench, 86 032 50

Short Video:

knipex - 1.jpeg

knipex - 2.jpeg

knipex - 3.jpeg

Knipex Raptor lists at $43.15 at Harry Epstein's, something you could order on the coming HJE Day 2025 this coming weekend. (Plus shipping. Order more stuff, shipping isn't so bad.)



 

rshadd

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2009
Messages
1,598
Location
Doylestown, PA

mikeinri

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 29, 2019
Messages
8,229
Location
MA

NUTTSGT

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Sep 14, 2009
Messages
50,912
Location
Northern Central Ohio
Wiha extra-long bit holder:

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h19m26.jpg

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h20m01.jpg

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h21m41.jpg

2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h28m02.jpg

Polish-made for €12.95 in my local Hornbach? Yes please!

Total length 410 mm, shank length from handle to tip 303 mm, hex bar across flats 6.0 mm.

Initially bought to rebuild a tyre pump, but I often encounter situations where this will be handy. It’s true that removeable bits aren’t ideal in a deep recess for which a long shank is useful, but it’s also true that I can’t afford (money, space) a bunch of extremely long screwdrivers. So this compromise will do for me.
Is that Euros or something else ?

In US Dollars ?
 

chris_1001

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 2, 2014
Messages
327
Location
MA
OK, so here's the story...

I got into the rocket hobby in the early 80s, through a friend from Boy Scouts, whose dad (also our Scoutmaster) got him going. Back before the internet (and before I had a driver's license), our access to rockets was primarily through mail-order catalogs, at least for the model kits. I could buy engines at a mall toy store (K-B Toys, IIRC), but they had an extremely limited assortment of rocket models.

Anyway, I was always a rule-follower (my friend and I both became Eagle Scouts at the same time, within a year or two after this episode), and somewhere along the line, I learned that I needed a permit (maybe just to buy engines without an adult?) in RI.

The permit process went through my town's Fire Department. On the application, I had to list specifically where I planned to fly the rockets. Pretty much any park in town was OK, plus the fields at local schools. In reality, only a handful were big enough, without being surrounded by forests, to be able to fly and actually RECOVER a rocket.

So, with permit in my wallet, and maybe a year's worth of buying, building and flying without issues or complaints, I decided that my next science project would involve model rockets. Created a few different fin designs, used the same body, nose cones, engines, etc. and tried to differentiate which was the better fin design...

Got all of the rockets built, and carried all of the stuff to the local high school on our bikes. Not OUR high school, mind you, as we went to a private high school further away, in the next city over (beyond reasonable biking distance, especially given the hill involved, while carrying a ton of rocket-launching gear).

Wearing our "visitor" school jackets, we stuck out like two sore thumbs, running up and down the athletic fields, launching and chasing my rockets.

After around 45 minutes of this, we hear someone yelling at us from the other side of the chain link fence near the street. Turned out to be a police officer.

Assuming he was questioning our rocket-launching-approval status, I pulled the permit out of my wallet and gave it to him. He stared at it, but couldn't make any sense of it.

He had us climb over the fence, get into the back of the squad car, and started asking us all sorts of ID questions. We were probably around 14-15 at the time, so we didn't have any IDs, other than school IDs (maybe).

After sitting there for 20-30 minutes, he let us go.

Apparently, someone had broken into the computer lab at the high school we were visiting, setting off an alarm that called the police; and when he pulled up, he saw two yahoos running away from the building (us idiots, blissfully unaware of what was happening, just chasing a rocket)...

To this day, I don't think that permit was worth the paper it was written on.

Mike

I'm in MA, back in the late 70's I remember my Dad getting the permit so we could buy the engines, Village Tinker in Sudbury was my go to hobby shop.
 
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pfbz

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2008
Messages
955
Wiha extra-long bit holder:
Polish-made for €12.95 in my local Hornbach? Yes please!
Total length 410 mm, shank length from handle to tip 303 mm, hex bar across flats 6.0 mm.2025-06-28-Wiha long bit driver-20h19m26.jpg

Nice! Coincidently, I also picked one up, arrived a couple of days ago... ~$8 and some change on Amazon.

Mine is red instead of yellow, and stamped "Made in Germany". i wonder if the yellow on yours is what denotes the non German COO?

Super nice tool for eight bucks! Magnetic bit retention is just right, holds firmly but still is removable with a good tug. Shown next to my new Wiha Centrofix, which is also nice, but 4X the price.


wiha bit holder - 4.jpegwiha bit holder - 3.jpegwiha bit holder - 2.jpegwiha bit holder - 1.jpeg
 

Samuel D

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 9, 2019
Messages
638
Is that Euros or something else ?

In US Dollars ?
Euros. I’m in the Netherlands. €13 is about $15 I suppose.

I see Hornbach in Austria only charges €10 for this long bit driver.

These prices include the 20-odd per cent VAT (a sales tax) that European countries charge.

Nice! Coincidently, I also picked one up, arrived a couple of days ago... ~$8 and some change on Amazon.
Even better!

Mine is red instead of yellow, and stamped "Made in Germany". i wonder if the yellow on yours is what denotes the non German COO?

Super nice tool for eight bucks!
Could be, regarding the colours. I’m happy with a CoO of any free democracy these days. Poland has manufacturing heritage too, of course.

Does the flat on the handle opposite your embossed MADE IN GERMANY have a number perchance? Mine says 24, which might just be a mould part number but could equally be the year of manufacture.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,730
Location
Far NE Oregon
....


Could be, regarding the colours. I’m happy with a CoO of any free democracy these days. Poland has manufacturing heritage too, of course.

Does the flat on the handle opposite your embossed MADE IN GERMANY have a number perchance? Mine says 24, which might just be a mould part number but could equally be the year of manufacture.
Best of luck with that!
 
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Maxcustody

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 26, 2021
Messages
1,466
Location
West Virginia
Been slowly converting my smaller outdoor equipment into electric, never the large chainsaw, but my less used stuff like leaf blowers, string trimmers, and edgers- YES!

My older Husquvana 2 stroke has done my well, but because they used less and they sit around a lot. This just made more sense and I know my shoulder will thank me later.

And since all my garage stuff is already on the Dewalt 20 volt platform, this is just making more and more sense as of late.

String.jpeg
I had this same tool and unfortunately did not last long. I have a large property and a lot of weeds. The motor did not last and burned up. Now it sits in the garage, broken in the closet.................

I hope you have better luck.
 

SC Fly Guy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 7, 2019
Messages
360
Location
Aiken, SC & Lakewood, NY
I’d like too but I don’t want to be that guy cross posting all over. Figured this could go into this thread, vintage toolbox, Kennedy … ect. I try to pick one and be done..lol.

Steve
I think a lot of us post frequently in both. My rationale … new tool purchases in this thread, new to me, but well-loved in the Garage Sale thread.
 

lund

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 2, 2019
Messages
766
Location
Michigan
Japan uses 100v and 200v electrical systems in different parts of the country.
Some people think a transformer to change the voltage is necessary to use the Japanese spec units.
My guess, is that Makita probably uses wire and insulation that can handle 120v current just fine, and that the only difference will be slight differences in the output speed.
At least that is my understanding.
I think in Japan the standard line voltage is 100V AC rms @ 50 Hz or at 60 Hz. The 50 Hz case is in roughly half of the country, and 60 Hz in the other half. The segregation exists for historical reasons. For high power applications the higher usa line voltage standard of 120 V AC rms @ 60 Hz can make a difference. Heating elements etc will be significantly stronger Power = V^2/R where R is the resistance of the element. So for the same R, the power will be (120/100)^2 = 1.44 times larger. This can cause high power systems (example: an electric heating element in a cooking appliance or hair dryer) to go out of design power range. So care is needed when you use small appliances and equipment from Japan to the USA. For electric motors, the 50 Hz standard in Japan (if designed for that) can result, depending on specifics of the motor design, lower rpm speeds that may impact applications.

I am not sure what the implications for the chain saw morticer would be. That is a question for the manufacturer. They should know since Japan exports a lot.

Note these AC line voltage differences do not make much difference for universal DC supplies powering electronics. Most electronic power supplies can easily operate with either US or Japanese line voltages and the frequency shift is largely irrelevant (maybe a bit more ripple on the DC output for 50 Hz but that should not matter for most stuff). "Universal" power supplies for electronics are often designed to work with either 240V AC @ 60Hz European standard or US 120 V AC @ 60 Hz standard power sources.
 
Last edited:

lund

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 2, 2019
Messages
766
Location
Michigan
I had this same tool and unfortunately did not last long. I have a large property and a lot of weeds. The motor did not last and burned up. Now it sits in the garage, broken in the closet.................

I hope you have better luck.
See my post: https://www.garagejournal.com/forum...-tool-arrivals.103272/page-1870#post-11228936

This issue is notorious and results from the motor vents getting plugged. Different DeWalt models with the motor on the users end connecting to the trim head via a drive shaft do not suffer the issue.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,730
Location
Far NE Oregon
Here's what the magnetic chuck is for:
 

NUTTSGT

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Sep 14, 2009
Messages
50,912
Location
Northern Central Ohio
@NUTTSGT soon as I saw the new trays... I knew where the story would go.

Seek help my son... Seek help. Or discount codes or coupons.... Either will help.
Too late my friend, too late.

Either I bought the sockets today or ordered them from The Jungle.... most of the rest will be here tomorrow.
 

dscheidt

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2017
Messages
2,889
Wiha extra-long bit holder:



Polish-made for €12.95 in my local Hornbach? Yes please!

Total length 410 mm, shank length from handle to tip 303 mm, hex bar across flats 6.0 mm.

Initially bought to rebuild a tyre pump, but I often encounter situations where this will be handy. It’s true that removeable bits aren’t ideal in a deep recess for which a long shank is useful, but it’s also true that I can’t afford (money, space) a bunch of extremely long screwdrivers. So this compromise will do for me.

I've superglued bits in when I was worried they were going to come off. Usually, a good tug and twist with a pair of pliers gets it out, but a little heat or brake cleaner (mostly acetone) works too. I've also superglued screws to the bit (and washers to nuts, and ...) for similar reasons.
 

pfbz

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2008
Messages
955
I've never tried
I've superglued bits in when I was worried they were going to come off. Usually, a good tug and twist with a pair of pliers gets it out, but a little heat or brake cleaner (mostly acetone) works too. I've also superglued screws to the bit (and washers to nuts, and ...) for similar reasons.
I've never tried those particular solutions before... i'll keep that in mind the next time a similar need arises.
 

dscheidt

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2017
Messages
2,889
I've never tried
I've never tried those particular solutions before... i'll keep that in mind the next time a similar need arises.

superglue is handy for all sorts of stuff around the shop. I always had luck with the stuff, but I've discovered the trick is having fresh stuff and using activator/accelerator. When I was a kid, my dad treated it like it was precious. he kept it a special cardboard thing in the fridge, and it never worked. about 15 years ago, I got a job in a building that also housed a superglue distributor. I ran into the owner in the hallway a lot, and one day he asked me and a bunch of my coworkers if we wanted some CA glue. We said sure, and he came back with a couple thousand little tubes of glue. It was a private label product, and they'd lost the contract or something. I'm down to my last 15 tubes, I think. I use enough of it that the tubes are always used up before they go bad.

The accelerator thing is eye opening. you spray it on the joint, and it's set. Or you can spray one side of the joint in advance, and put glue on the other. Put 'em togeher and bang. No long holding, just a scond or so. There's a loss of strength, but for lots of the things I do that either doesn't matter, or is a good thing.
 
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