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12 point sockets, are they necessary?

street131

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I have always wondered how necessary are 12 point sockets.... are they something that is almost a must have is your going to become a mechanic?
 
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krusty the clown

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deja vue all over again



yep we have discussed this about once a month. there are quite a few 12pt fasteners used. i have a 12mm for ford driveshafts and 13mm, 15mm, and 9/16 for hub bearings. there are more aout there but those will be the most common.
 

Fedwrench

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Search the archives. Everyone has a different opinion and this horse has been flogged to death repeatedly but, it's still ok to ask. My spin, is that if you run into 12 point fasteners, you need them at least in those sizes you encounter. Otherwise, 6 point sockets are vastly superior.:bounce:
 

sk farmer

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after you have everything coverd in 6, you need 12. well over 90% of the time 12 pt will work perfectly fine unless you see severely rusted , corroded or damaged fasteners. even then it can be a crapshoot with the six. still, go with 6 and fill in 12 as needed in a set or singles. go find a pawn shop and scrounge through the cman bins to pick the ones you may need.
 

Merkava_4

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I don't have to rotate a 12 point socket near as far for engagement as I do with a 6 point. "Vastly superior" engagement speed. :bounce:
 

caper

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I have a twenty mm 12pt on order from my Snappy guy now.That's something I never figured I'd need.
 

Gregster

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deja vue all over again



yep we have discussed this about once a month. there are quite a few 12pt fasteners used. i have a 12mm for ford driveshafts and 13mm, 15mm, and 9/16 for hub bearings. there are more aout there but those will be the most common.



Those are the sizes I have and I use the 12mm most often for Ford driveshafts. 10mm for VW/Audi pressure plate bolts.
 
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street131

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i might as well get a good set of 12 points, one thing i absolutely hate if not having a tool when i need it. I think most of you know what im talking about.
 

Gregster

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i might as well get a good set of 12 points, one thing i absolutely hate if not having a tool when i need it. I think most of you know what im talking about.

The shop across the street kept borrowing my 12pt set. Last Xmas I bought the owner a 12pt set from SK and he bought me a power steering pump pulley remover.
 
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PowderKeg

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12pt sockets have worked plenty fine for decades and decades. Take a walk thru any fleamarket, auction, or yard sale and take note of the ratio of old USA 12pt to 6pt sockets (in 3/8" drive and up, and excepting impacts). The vast majority are 12pt. Why, because that's what was mostly offered and used, and because they work fine in most instances, except as sk farmer noted - then the gas wrench may end up the better (or last) alternative. Softer metal fasteners like aluminum or brass are normally better removed with a 6pt also, just as it's preferred to use a flarenut wrench over an open end for tubing and such. I may be wrong, but aren't the great majority of ratcheting wrenches 12pt as well?

It really just comes down to personal preference - if ya like 6pt, go for 'em. If ya like 12pt, they'll work just fine, like mine have for 30 years. Ultimately, picking up or building sets of each would give near complete coverage for those less frequent times that only one or the other will work.

I'd be curious to hear from a long-time truck tool dealer about when the preference for 6pt stuff (chromed, not impact) started to rise - seems to me that's only been recently, maybe 10 or so years, if that? Or maybe I'm way off.
 
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Fedwrench

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I don't have to rotate a 12 point socket near as far for engagement as I do with a 6 point. "Vastly superior" engagement speed. :bounce:

It would help if you had a better ratchet with more than 30 teeth like a F80 or FLF80, or a Matco 88, or even a Gearwrench 60 tooth model.:bounce:
 

Mickey O

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I have always wondered how necessary are 12 point sockets.... are they something that is almost a must have is your going to become a mechanic?

No 12 point sockets are not necessary, please take all of your 12 point Snap On, Cornwell, Mac, Matco, Bonney and other high end 12 point sockets and send them to me, I will personally make sure they are properly disposed of.
 

bushhawg73

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If Chicago is to far you can send them to me in Florida for disposal. I work in a crime scene unit and we have a policy that tells us exactly how to dispose of things. I would make sure that all of the EPA and PITA guidelines are followed when disposing of your unsightly mess. This way you would have a clean record and could buy anything you wanted. Keep me in mind.
 

sk farmer

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12pt sockets have worked plenty fine for decades and decades. Talk a walk thru any fleamarket, auction, or yard sale and take note of the ratio of old USA 12pt to 6pt sockets (in 3/8" drive and up, and excepting impacts). The vast majority are 12pt. Why, because that's what was mostly offered and used, and because they work fine in most instances, except as sk farmer noted - then the gas wrench may end up the better (or last) alternative. Softer metal fasteners like aluminum or brass are normally better removed with a 6pt also, just as it's preferred to use a flarenut wrench over an open end for tubing and such. I may be wrong, but aren't the great majority of ratcheting wrenches 12pt as well?

It really just comes down to personal preference - if ya like 6pt, go for 'em. If ya like 12pt, they'll work just fine, like mine have for 30 years. Ultimately, picking up or building sets of each would give near complete coverage for those less frequent times that only one or the other will work.

I'd be curious to hear from a long-time truck tool dealer about when the preference for 6pt stuff (chromed, not impact) started to rise - seems to me that's only been recently, maybe 10 or so years, if that? Or maybe I'm way off.
well said powderkeg. truth be known a complete set of 6 and 12 point in 3/8 should be a given. i often have two handles of some sort (ratchet, breaker, extension, t-bar, speed handle, etc) in use with the same size socket, hence the need for multiple sets. removing any fastener should not be a problem, espically after it has been broken loose. in my shop tool chest i have a set of sae 3/8 in 6pt, 12pt and a mixed set.
 

caper

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What's that for?

(i have one)

Lower idler gear on International 466egr engines.Needed it twice in the last two weeks.Used a 13/16 12pt but it was sloppy and the torque on this bolt is 482 ft/lbs so I'd prefer not to have it jump as I'm pulling on it.:shocking:
 

jonlb

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I have both and I will say that my 12 pts are craftsman and my 6 pts are cheap sockets so most of the time a reach for the 12 pts and I have never had an issue with them not grabbing.
 

rhandwor

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I would look around area Pawn shops and flea markets. Buy used craftsman 12 points for occasional use. Buy your tool truck sockets in 6 point. They are becoming more common for front wheel bearing nuts. These I would buy better quality.
SK makes a set of 1/4 drive 12 point. Craftsman make 1/2 drive and 3/8 drive.
Walmart had a set of Stanley 1/2 drive 12 point for $18.00.
 

speed bump

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I keep thinking I need to get around to buying a set of 12 point 1/4" drive socket because I have ran into times when they would be handy but I still haven't

For my sockets I use all the time I have 6 point in 1/4 and 3/8 and 12 point in 1/2 and 3/4 drive and that works great.
 

GTO

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I just put some nice SS ARP 12pt bolts on my rear end cover when I rebuilt my 10 bolt rear.Nice Bolts if you ask me.
 

mrjsl

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There is really no drawback to using 12 pt all the time, except the possibility of rounding something off, and IMO an open end wrench is 100 times more likely to round something off than a 12pt socket.

And the biggest argument for having sets of both is that if you are working on something and break a deep 6pt, or lose it, then you have a spare. Years ago my father and I both had 6.2 diesel pickups, and in those days my dad bought every 15mm socket he saw no matter how it was configured. We used them all. I still have 6 or 7 of them and none of them look new.
 

autoace

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I don't have to rotate a 12 point socket near as far for engagement as I do with a 6 point. "Vastly superior" engagement speed. :bounce:

Right, in tight quarters, 12 pts. are a big bonus. I use 12 pts. alot. High end sockets are more important in 12pt, you want tighter clearance for 12 pt. sockets.IMO
 
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In the bigger sizes, an SAE will usually fit a metric, or vice versa. 19MM is very close to 3/4. 20MM is close to 13/16, etc.

I agree, but for anything smaller than 1" or so, I try to use the proper metric size. (More excuses to buy tools)

10mm= 3/8"
11mm = 7/16"
13mm = 1/2"
14mm = 9/16"
19mm = 3/4"
24mm = 15/16"

A lot of times using a metric size on a nut or bolt head that is in bad shape will keep it from rounding off. You may have to tap it onto the hex.
 

wantedabiggergarage

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What do you all do for the 12 point sockets? Impact or Chrome?


I bought chrome for general purpose/home use, but I did specifically buy an impact 12mm for driveline as it never gets removed without air. If I started over (not counting the inherited 12 point), I think I might just get that SK impact 12 point set.
 

back2class

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12pt work on square nuts and 6pt don't. I believe that is a main reason you seem them in the vast majority of older sets. Squear nuts were pretty common on equiptment for the first 1/2 of the last century and designs tend to hold over. They are also easier beacuse as soneone noted they engage twice as fist and working in tight quarters and using clunky ratchets of old or breaker bars (also more used in older days) 12pt just work nicer. So as to why they are the standard in older sets is a no brainer.

Need them....NO
I believe they have a slightly thinner sidewall and there are a few 12pt fasteners out there but if you have 12pt. combo wrenches I see no real reason for them.
 
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