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12 point flare wrenches?

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brettboat

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I need them for SAE MS and AN fittings on aircraft. 6 point doesn't provide engagement in tight spaces. I'll look on the stahlwille website and see if I can find some in SAE...
 
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brettboat

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I already own the 12 point crows feet from ********. The problem is when I'm in a rats nest of hydraulic and pneumatic lines I can't always use a them... I've seen them before, I'm just trying to figure out who the hell makes them.
 

tbaggz

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Bonney made some zero offsets. ://s11.postimg.org/4k6r8ay1b/1396125418424.jpg[/img][/url]
 
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LB-1911

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Rico.

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Another possible alternative if you're in a pinch is a Crows Foot wrench on a stubby
ratchet... If it's a fine toothed ratchet it can be indexed to almost any angle and sometimes
give you the room you need. Obviously no good if you're height restricted but can often
times work when nothing else will.

But, as has been mentioned, there are 12 point flare wrenches out there... :thumbup:
 

bahcoswed

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I have stahlwille fastratch wrenches! But they doesnt have any 12 point:) Likely zero point:)


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Ign

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There's also the AP ones on clearance from Northern. They're 12pt but I think that's more due to the ratcheting design. Search the Hot Deals forum (maybe for "Astro") and they may only have the metrics IIRC.
 
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oldldh

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How about these? 12 pt, ratchetong and can be opened to use on tubing systems....

My son, where do you get these completely "unique, off-the-wall, no one else has ever seen" bizarre stuff???:dunno::dunno::dunno:

I've been on this planet for almost 70 years, used tools, of all kinds, for the majority of that time...

And I ain't never seen one of those...:shocking::shocking:

My education is obviously lacking...:evil::evil:
 

Outlawmws

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Well, about 40 years or so of Fleamarkets, yard and estate sales, and buying tools the entire time; and I picked up this nasty habit of buying tools that at times I didn't even know what they were for so long as they were good to best quality, adn cheap.. :evil:

Which is exactly how I found the first one of these, then a second, and frankly I like these better than GearWrench of the flat variety...

I want a set, but I'm also cheap! :lol:
 

mailpup

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I have a set of Proto 12 pt. flare nut wrenches, SAE and metric, that has already been mentioned. I also have a set of John Deere brand crowfoot 12 pt. metric flare nut wrenches. The John Deere set is made in Taiwan but I think Stanley is the parent tool company.
 

BDT/NWMN

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Do any of the major tool brands (MAC, MATCO, Snapon, ********) sell a 12 point flare wrench set?

Young Man, did your computer run out of ink??? :lol: That is only four names out of dozens of Major Brand Tool names..... not every company puts toolmobiles on the road.... But looking through the postings by Good Folks with some excellent suggestions;;;; Bet you sure know that now. .;)
 

bonneyman

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Isn't Granco the company that ended up with a lot of the Bonney tooling?

Yes. When Bonney got sold by Cooper Tools in 1994 or so, Granco Industries bought the dies and pull broaches. They intended to bring back Bonney tools one at a time (one of the company presidents told me on the phone), and actually did re-introduce a few items. But they ran into financial trouble, and I think the Bonney tooling has been sold for scrap.
 

Steinmetz

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Yes. When Bonney got sold by Cooper Tools in 1994 or so, Granco Industries bought the dies and pull broaches. They intended to bring back Bonney tools one at a time (one of the company presidents told me on the phone), and actually did re-introduce a few items. But they ran into financial trouble, and I think the Bonney tooling has been sold for scrap.

I think Granco sought bankruptcy protection.
 

bob15

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Yes. When Bonney got sold by Cooper Tools in 1994 or so, Granco Industries bought the dies and pull broaches. They intended to bring back Bonney tools one at a time (one of the company presidents told me on the phone), and actually did re-introduce a few items. But they ran into financial trouble, and I think the Bonney tooling has been sold for scrap.

It couldn't have been everything because Snap On bought the Bonney name and much of their equipment. Snap On (corporate) informed me of this around 1998-99 after calling them about it (wasn't much on the 'net for tool history back then). If you were to look at the brand names owned, you will find that Snap On owns the Bonney name....and I believe they also own LocRite name and design.

One person who might know more would a gentleman by the name of John Garner. He used to be on the old Tool Talk website of the late 90's and was a wealth of tool history.

bob
 

bonneyman

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Those were nice. If you can find them

Yes they are! :rocker:
Just used the 1/2"er on an encrusted brass compression nut, and it ratcheting that thing right off. I doubt a regular OE wrench would have fit without serious cleaning first.
 
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bonneyman

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It couldn't have been everything because Snap On bought the Bonney name and much of their equipment. Snap On (corporate) informed me of this around 1998-99 after calling them about it (wasn't much on the 'net for tool history back then). If you were to look at the brand names owned, you will find that Snap On owns the Bonney name....and I believe they also own LocRite name and design.

One person who might know more would a gentleman by the name of John Garner. He used to be on the old Tool Talk website of the late 90's and was a wealth of tool history.

bob

That is possible. The gentleman I spoke with talked as if he had wrench and socket tooling on hand. (And those were all I was interested in). Bonney made a whole lot of other hand tools - I don't know if Granco snagged that tooling.
IIRC, Epstein's was offered the tooling from Granco before it was scrapped. But I think that was a bit outside their business model.:D
 

Nortonscustom

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I picked up the Proto set of 12 flare nut wrenches a while back. Been really happy with them so far.

protoflarenutwrench2.jpg
 

bob15

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Ended up picking these up. Figured it was a good deal for a full set.

Those will work just fine....they are pre-Bonney in age, but are the same wrench that later production will have "Bonney" on. Loc-Rite is the original "flank drive" or "lobular" box end.
 
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brettboat

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Yea, apparently the set I got is not common at all... Some kind of gift given to Chrysler dealership mechanics back in like the late 1950s or early 1960s.

Too bad I'm a Ford man, only thing good Chrysler ever did was put a Cummins in their trucks. hahaha, I'm horrible
 
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