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AJHD

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2020
Messages
3,014
Location
AZ
Snap-on master tap and die set. I’ve never seen die sockets before so that’s pretty cool. My bay neighbor has a similar set but his doesn’t have the die sockets or anything fancy lol. This was on sale but I can’t remember the price maybe $635ish. Still doesn’t have all the taps I need but bigger than the Matco set I had originally purchased which will now be my home set. I have on order a M14x1.5 and M16x1.5 taps as well as an M12x1.25 that I ordered before I got this set but that’s fine it doesn’t hurt to have extras. Those are coming from Matco though. Man I need a bigger toolbox. My work won’t let me expand anymore so I can’t get a locker lol. I have to keep this underneath my box because I’m out of space and the drawer it goes in is full lol.
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I still need to buy a quality made tap and die set. But the price tag on that Snap On kit is crazy, and they have a yet even more expensive kit too.
 

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WWheeler

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 23, 2015
Messages
4,105
Location
Middleofnowhere USA
These are super since it is pretty rare that you can fit in a tap wrench in restricted access areas on most cars. I recommend using them with a small "breaker bar" or better yet a T-handle. Those allow you to go back and forth easily to break up chips in the thread cutting. Ratchets are a pain since you will need to continually change directions. But these together with sets of ratchet extensions (regular and wobble) and a universal joint will address a LOT of access issues.

I don't know why I never got tap sockets before. They've been on my list of wants and had them in my cart many times for years now, but I never pulled the trigger. Then I watched one of my coworkers use one of them in a small drill with a can of spray lube to tap about 25 holes he'd just drilled out in the time I'd usually take to get one or two done with a tap handle. It was at least 10 times as fast, rocking back and forth with the drill. One of those jaw in my lap moments. I couldn't order the set fast enough.

I did see there are now a bunch of no-name brands selling the same set, many even using Lisle's '70500' number, for as low as half the price. Almost went that route, as I suspect they're probably of a similar enough quality especially for my uses, but I've been wrong too many times before when I cheaped out on a tool. I've had a many Lisle tool and while they are not usually anything special, they tend to get the job done and have yet to fail me before I know I got my money's worth.
 

Steve_P

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5,182
I'm a DIY guy, who learned to replace brakes (drum and disc) with common hand tools back in the 80s. Pliers, screwdrivers, wrenches and sockets, and of course a C-clamp (and maybe a BFH)...

As for the caliper tools, I still don't get it, even with a double piston. Just leave the old pad in place and squeeze on that with the C-clamp.

Again, I'm sure the specialty tools are nice for professionals, but I question how much they really matter even to them.

Maybe I just need to see them used side-by-side against a C-clamp. Is there a good video for that (one not "rigged" by the creator to make his point to buy the specialty tool)?

Mike

I don't understand why this has to be debated here, and we've been thru this before. "Back in my day, we just used a c-clamp or Channellocks. We didn't need no fancy tools."
First: this is a tool forum.
Second: cars have been sold with four piston (two on each side) painted/powder coated Brembo, and other, calipers for decades now, including non-exotics like Subaru STi. Six piston calipers aren't uncommon on modern performance cars. Are you not aware that painted, or powder coated, 4-6 piston calipers exist?

And yes, I learned in the 1980s also with a c-clamp. But vehicles evolve and times change. I will spend the $20 for the correct tool to touch only the pistons, or pads, and not my $500+ painted Brembo caliper. I doubt anyone working at a dealership isn't using the correct caliper tools because they'd be fired after their first pad change if they F'd up someone's painted calipers.

 

51dueller

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 22, 2021
Messages
219
Location
Saskatchewan
Picked up the 17 piece Gearwrench XL gearbox wrenches in the prime day sale. The normal price difference between the 12 piece and 17 piece was pretty stupid but on sale brought it in line.
20250717_190505.jpg

I've been wanting some stubby ratchet wrenches for a while but the bigger metric set just never goes on sale. The 7 piece is fine for sae but I've wanted the 10 piece for metric. Even the Mastercraft Maximum ones are still $50 cdn on sale for each 7 piece set. KMS tools had the Gearwrench 14 piece sae and metric 72 tooth set on sale for $50. Of course Gearwrench doesn't sell the 72 tooth ones individually, only the 90 tooth. I bought the Westward branded ones to fill in the gap and I got the 8mm and 9mm which Gearwrench doesn't offer themselves. Since Ernest only makes a 11 wrench stubby gripper, I forgo a 19mm as I could use the 3/4 wrench instead. The 9mm is currently on backorder.
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Here's the 8mm Westward beside the 10mm Gearwrench. It has the Gearwrench telltale date letter stamped in it.
20250717_190538.jpg
 

Kasal

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 21, 2017
Messages
735
Location
Galicia, España
Today I had to cut the grass in the garden. After running the string trimmer through the corners where the lawnmower couldn't reach, the sidewalks were covered in grass, dirt, and dust. I was about to sweep a broom I bought a few days ago.
Screenshot_20250718_214950_Chrome.jpg
Then I remembered I'm a GJ member, and I went to get a tool suitable for the job. I was thinking of a Hecho 2520, but the Sthill dealership was just a few yards away. I stopped to ask, and walked out the door with this. Sthil BG86:
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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,739
Location
Far NE Oregon
I can't find my old Olfa circle cutter that I use to make medium-size gaskets--I know I put it away when I was going through the shop organization frenzy. Just no idea where that "proper place" might have been.

So:

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Now I'll find the old one.

The roller on my chisel/plane iron sharpening jig no longer appears to be perpendicular to the clamp:

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Maybe using it on a 3" belt sander to rough-square badly skewed plane irons wasn't the best of ideas.

So I bought a new one:

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The gauge for setting the blade angle is a little more refined than my shop-built one. No idea what some of the angles would be used for. I use 25 and 30 degrees and those seem to cover my needs.
 

moemc

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2025
Messages
356
Everything I work on uses 4+ piston calipers with pads that slide out of the top. With out-the-top calipers, I haven’t used any tool except the brake pad itself. I slide it about 1/2 to 2/3 out and then leverage it against the rotor edge to push the pistons back in. If I have a stubborn one, I will turn the pad 90 degrees for extra leverage. The pad friction material doesnt harm the edge of the rotor. This is the only way I have done it for 20 years. Like I am sure a lot of people here are; I am looking for any excuse to buy a new tool. But the only caliper piston pusher I have is the one I got in auto shop class when I was 16 years old, for use with the rare single piston sliding calipers. Although now I’m realizing I have a car with carbon ceramic brakes I haven’t changed the pads on before, and for that I may choose not to leverage anything against the rotor since they are known to be brittle to localized pressure.
 

moemc

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2025
Messages
356
I still need to buy a quality made tap and die set. But the price tag on that Snap On kit is crazy, and they have a yet even more expensive kit too.
eBay is a great place to source high end taps. Job shops will purchase a surplus for a contract they are running, and when the contract ends they will offload the leftovers on eBay. The real good stuff is a lot more expensive then what you get in the comprehensive kits, but if you focus on just the threads that are relevant to you, you could build a kit with superior thread cutting tools for the same or less money.
 

tyyost

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 14, 2009
Messages
803
Location
Tunkhannock, PA
I don't understand why this has to be debated here, and we've been thru this before. "Back in my day, we just used a c-clamp or Channellocks. We didn't need no fancy tools."
First: this is a tool forum.
Second: cars have been sold with four piston (two on each side) painted/powder coated Brembo, and other, calipers for decades now, including non-exotics like Subaru STi. Six piston calipers aren't uncommon on modern performance cars. Are you not aware that painted, or powder coated, 4-6 piston calipers exist?
I‘m glad you chimed in, I bought the Lang tool a few years ago after doing things the shade tree way for a long time. Heck, I even have a nice c-clamp I keep lubed and ready with my brake gear. The tool is fast, works easy and makes it a snap to bleed back the caliper. When I debated buying the lang tool there was a thread and someone suggested the vise grip clamps as well, and while it worked, it was like using big channel locks…

I live in the rust belt and maintain several cars 10+ years old with over 150k miles. Anything I can do to make the job easier I’m game for. I’m curious if the caulking gun style may be the ticket on my single piston rear calipers since my lang tool is the larger model.
 

rshadd

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2009
Messages
1,598
Location
Doylestown, PA
Decided I needed better tools for cleaning my windows... So I threw away my junk gas station squeegee/scrubber combo and got some pro tools. Not sure if I'm gonna like the F*LIQ scrubbers but figured I'd give it and try.

Moerman Takumi Pole - 8 Foot
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IMG_0876 - Copy.JPG
Moerman Complete Baobab Stripwasher
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Moerman Complete Microfiber Stripwasher

Moerman Excelerator 2.0 Handle (tilts and swivels)

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10" / With F*LIQ Washer Strip
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14" / With F*LIQ Washer Strip
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Ettore Master Squeegee Rubber
Ettore Master Brass Squeegee Channel

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Right right tools always makes the difference.
 

mikeinri

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 29, 2019
Messages
8,231
Location
MA
I don't understand why this has to be debated here, and we've been thru this before. "Back in my day, we just used a c-clamp or Channellocks. We didn't need no fancy tools."
First: this is a tool forum.
Second: cars have been sold with four piston (two on each side) painted/powder coated Brembo, and other, calipers for decades now, including non-exotics like Subaru STi. Six piston calipers aren't uncommon on modern performance cars. Are you not aware that painted, or powder coated, 4-6 piston calipers exist?

And yes, I learned in the 1980s also with a c-clamp. But vehicles evolve and times change. I will spend the $20 for the correct tool to touch only the pistons, or pads, and not my $500+ painted Brembo caliper. I doubt anyone working at a dealership isn't using the correct caliper tools because they'd be fired after their first pad change if they F'd up someone's painted calipers.


Debated? Well, I'm looking to be convinced. I was really just asking someone to SHOW me why it would be an improvement on a simple, basic caliper. You just gave (another) example of a more exotic one. I'm not saying NO ONE needs these, I'm asking to see how it would help me.

And while I'm not sure what this has to do with it (but others have mentioned it): I drive 20+ year old American vehicles (parts from elsewhere, of course), to 300k miles, in a very rust-prone environment.

More often than not lately, I'm replacing calipers when I do brake jobs because the exposed pistons get pitted from rust and don't function properly after compressing them.

But again, $20 is cheap money for something that'll improve the job, I'd just like to be shown how.

[EDIT: BTW, after decades of fighting to adjust drum brakes with screwdrivers, I finally bought the proper tools, and that was a huge improvement, so I'm not against this.]

Mike
 
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Dave455

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
5,804
Location
Sussex, England
That word for a sub-brand does amuse me.

Britool Expert - worse, then became...
Expert by Facom - worse
Draper Expert - better
MAC Expert - worse
The Draper “Expert” is the odd one out there.

Draper have imported tools into the U.K. for many decades, and even 40+ years ago were bringing in reasonably priced tools from the far east. Many of these were from Japan, which were already a notch above the competition. Draper saved money by specifying a cheaper finish - a matte chrome.

The “ Expert” range were finished in a polished chrome, and were surprisingly decent. For the price, exceptional. I think it’s all made in Taiwan now, but my local motor factor keeps it, and it’s not bad.

The Britool / Facom / Mac Expert are different. I think it’s all from China, all equally poor, and peddled under whichever name SBD thinks has the most cachet.
 
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Squankum

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 28, 2011
Messages
7,699
Location
Southeast
The Draper “Expert” is the odd one out there.

Draper have imported tools into the U.K. for many decades, and even 40+ years ago were bringing in reasonably priced tools from the far east. Many of these were from Japan, which were already a notch above the competition. Draper saved money by specifying a cheaper finish - a matte chrome.

The “ Expert” range were finished in a polished chrome, and were surprisingly decent. For the price, exceptional. I think it’s all made in Taiwan now, but my local motor factor keeps it, and it’s not bad.

The Britool / Facom / Mac Expert are different. I think it’s all from China, all equally poor, and peddled under whichever name SBD thinks has the most cachet.

Facom doesn't do any China that I know, but a decent amount of Taiwan, and it is good. .
 
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pfbz

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2008
Messages
956
Picked up the 17 piece Gearwrench XL gearbox wrenches in the prime day sale. The normal price difference between the 12 piece and 17 piece was pretty stupid but on sale brought it in line.
20250717_190505.jpg

What was the prime day pricing on the 17 piece set? I recently picked up the 12 piece set through Woot, $116. Ii think it's still available through them.
 

Dave455

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
5,804
Location
Sussex, England
Facom doesn't do any China that I know, but a decent amount of Taiwan, and it is good. .
Facom proper comes from a variety of countries. France, Italy, and predominantly Taiwan now. Yes, decent tools for the most part. See the Facom tools thread for details.

Britool Expert / Expert by Facom. / Mac Expert (all essentially similar) are different. Lower quality tools at lower prices. Probably not that low if you buy from the Mac truck.

In fairness, some Taiwan tools, even some European, but a lot of Chinese, and they‘re not great. You have to pick and choose.
IMG_2047.jpegIMG_2048.jpeg
IMG_2051.jpegIMG_2052.jpegIMG_2055.jpegIMG_2056.jpeg

The Britool “Expert“ (only sold under that name in the U.K.) was the crudest attempt ever to ring the absolute last out of a once great name.

Draper ”Expert“ are totally unrelated, and different tools, which was really my point.
 
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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,739
Location
Far NE Oregon
Another pair of these cheap, $7.50 Chicom flush-cutters for the zip-tie bucket:

54664902422_7523eae974_o.jpg

A coworker used my first pair the other day. Within five minutes, he'd lost them. I ordered this pair and found the originals about ten minutes later--but now I have one pair for the electronics tool box and one for the zip-ties.

They work well and leave a perfectly flush cut. They come with a spring, which I tossed. If you can't operate a pair of pliers without a spring in the handle, you don't deserve to use pliers.
 

51dueller

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 22, 2021
Messages
219
Location
Saskatchewan
What was the prime day pricing on the 17 piece set? I recently picked up the 12 piece set through Woot, $116. Ii think it's still available through them.
Prime day sale pricing was $299 cdn for the 17 piece which is $20 cdn over regular price of the 12 piece set. Regular price for the 17 piece set is currently $495 cdn. The 5 piece expansion set for the 12 set is $245 cdn.
 

gilbo

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 1, 2010
Messages
716
Finally, able to get some tools at an estate sale for OK prices.
Proto 1 1/16" Wrench $5
Snap On Combo Wrench $5
Snap On 3 Piece Mini Wrenches $7.50
Western Auto USA 24" Pipe Wrench $15
Snap On 3 Piece Punch Set $7.50
Cornwell USA 1/2" Swivel Socket $1.50
Snap On 26" Flathead Screwdriver $5
Proto wrench.jpgSnap On combo wrench.jpgSnap On mini wrenches.jpgWA USA pipe wrench.jpgSnap On punches.jpgCornwell USA swivel socket.jpg
Snap On 26%22 screwdriver1.jpgSnap On 26%22 screwedriver2.jpg
 

Hakeem

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 22, 2024
Messages
1,251
Location
Chicago
Beautiful embossing on this specimen. Never seen a wrench like that from Snapon.

I was in need of a large adjustable wrench and wanted to buy American but there wasn’t a whole lot available, let alone at a reasonable price. Even Proto makes theirs in Taiwan, alas. Fortunately I stumbled upon this 16” spud wrench from Klein, on sale for $60:

IMG_1888.jpeg
IMG_1889.jpeg

It’s rated at 1-5/8” capacity but the jaws open to a c-hair short of 1-3/4”
IMG_1891.jpeg

Performed very well in the strength tests I saw, likely owing to the beefy jaws. Good news, because that tapered handle is just asking for a cheater pipe. I’m very stoked with my US made wrench and I look forward to putting it to use on some big hydraulic fittings
 

Squankum

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 28, 2011
Messages
7,699
Location
Southeast
Facom proper comes from a variety of countries. France, Italy, and predominantly Taiwan now. Yes, decent tools for the most part. See the Facom tools thread for details.

Britool Expert / Expert by Facom. / Mac Expert (all essentially similar) are different. Lower quality tools at lower prices. Probably not that low if you buy from the Mac truck.

In fairness, some Taiwan tools, even some European, but a lot of Chinese, and they‘re not great. You have to pick and choose.
IMG_2047.jpegIMG_2048.jpeg
IMG_2051.jpegIMG_2052.jpegIMG_2055.jpegIMG_2056.jpeg

The Britool “Expert“ (only sold under that name in the U.K.) was the crudest attempt ever to ring the absolute last out of a once great name.

Draper ”Expert“ are totally unrelated, and different tools, which was really my point.

Ah, I forgot about FACOM Expert -- don't see much of that in the states, if at all.
 

2ndGearRubber

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 24, 2014
Messages
14,185
Location
Pittsburgh
Debated? Well, I'm looking to be convinced. I was really just asking someone to SHOW me why it would be an improvement on a simple, basic caliper. You just gave (another) example of a more exotic one. I'm not saying NO ONE needs these, I'm asking to see how it would help me.

And while I'm not sure what this has to do with it (but others have mentioned it): I drive 20+ year old American vehicles (parts from elsewhere, of course), to 300k miles, in a very rust-prone environment.

More often than not lately, I'm replacing calipers when I do brake jobs because the exposed pistons get pitted from rust and don't function properly after compressing them.

But again, $20 is cheap money for something that'll improve the job, I'd just like to be shown how.

[EDIT: BTW, after decades of fighting to adjust drum brakes with screwdrivers, I finally bought the proper tools, and that was a huge improvement, so I'm not against this.]

Mike

They help when your wrists ache after doing 8 axles worth of brakes in a day with some ****** 2" handle on a c-clamp or manual twist tool. If you like manual tools, visegrip 11R gives you good feeling as to how the piston moves while compressing while giving you good mechanical advantage. Lang 279 gives more advantage, with less feel. Is probably slower in a race as well, but generally easier to use. I keep those two, a lisle "pistol grip" style compressor, and a pneumatic wind back tool from mastercool in the cart.


It's just a function of how often you use them, and how hard you want to work. Sometimes I'm torquing enough things it's worth walking 40ft to my box, and 40ft back, just to save time manually turning a clicker torque wrench.
 
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