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Aircraft mechanic toolbox showing off

Aircraftmechanicxav

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Joined
Nov 19, 2021
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25
So i wanted to show off my set up. First thing you gotta know about aircraft maintenance is that we dont have any metric. Even if its a plane made in france, operated by a french crew and with french registration, all the bolts are in sae so no need to have two set of everything.
Second of all, tool control is everything. If a car mechanic loose is wrench in the engine bay of a car, most extreme case it damage the engine but mostly he loose a wrench. If an aircraft mechanic loose his wrench in the engine bay of a plane, wellits more severe so its a company requirement that all toolbox are foamed to prevent tools being lost.

My box is a rousseau 84 inches wich is considered overkill for an aircraft mechanic. Usually a 60 inch toolbox is considered huge for an aircraft mechaniv because you want to roll it from plane to plane. But some guy want to park it and use bags to go into where they would works. Wich is what i mostly do. We mostly use 1/4 drive socket and although i have a 1/2 drive impact gun in there, i never use it and i have it merely because i like the way it look. I do use an impact driver and on some occasion a 3/8 impact electric ratchet but i mostly use my 1/4 drive electric ratchet. So enjoy my set up.

Fyi the rousseau toolbox is sold in the usa as tekton, but i bought it from rousseau directly so it is 100% custom made

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So as you can see even the ignition key are foamed and everything in place

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This drawer seem empty but its because i like having an empty drawer for future tools as i want to buy some open ended wrench that are non offset in the future. In this you see the 36" drive extension 3/8 and 1/4 wich is super usefull for unscrewing fuel panel on dash8 and atr. I put those extension on a speedhandle and can unscrew them while standing up instead of being on my knee. I can also use it on my 1/4 invh ratchet. Sometime i would use my impact driver but again, that fuel panel on the atr is worth around 30 000$ and use four wings screw (they look like phillips but are offset) so they dont have impact buts for those and regular bits would break often and risk damaging that 30k fuel panel. On the dash8 they sometime use philips wich i would use my impact with impact bit. Sometime they use triwing screw wich is a kind of screw that already come stripped because why not? In that case well good luck.

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Here you see that impact driver i told you i never use. But the one in the middle, the butterfly imoact, omg that thing is the best invention since the invention of sliced bread. I can remove screw and bolt for fuel tank or leading edge so easily. Just be careful because one time a dumb new guy at my work was to open the fuel tank and i told him "oh take this tool, it is made for opening the fuel tank" and it did work but for some reason he had to then reclose it temporarely and used it to retitghten the screw and busted all the dome nuts behind it. Because it was an impact and he just kept pressing the trigger. And when i asked him if he drank brake cleaner before coming to work he answered me "well its your fault you told me that tool was designed for fuel panel" in otherword, never loan an impact tool to somebody who doesnt know how to use it. But i digress.

I also have many socket 1/2 inch drive wich are really used for specialty purpose such as landing gear bolts, but only for dash8. The embraer uses spline drive wich we have at the store and that i have elsewhere in my toolbox. I also have my electric drill, air gun, die grinder.

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Here you have tools that i seldom use and most important stuff, its foamed in 3d. If you remove lets say the breaker bar, well underneath theres another breaker bar, and i have 4 plier on top of the other. But if a plier were to be missing, i would still know, because the top plier would not be flush then with the rest of it. So theres still tool control in it.

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Now my top chest wich is a mastercraft. You might ask what is that black plier by the right. Well its a locking wire plier wich you find only in aviation and race car. Its basicly you take a steel wire, and you atach it in a hole on a bolt and you twist it and attach it to another hole in the head of a bolt in a way that will prevent bolts from looseninh. Kinda smart. You might also notcie duck bill plier wich are a must
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These are my most used tools in there. The cotter pin puller bottom right, a must have also for aircraft mechanic. Those who knows know
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My impact driver and electrical ratchet as well as my double boxed wrench, ratcheting wrench and flex socket.

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My screwdriver. Tekton set plys a snap on ratcheting one and fourwing 8 and 10 and triwing 4 and 5

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That big knipex, one coworker told me "man youre never ever ever going to need that why did you spend 250$ on that". Then that same week that same guy borrowed me that knipex FOUR times. When you want to remove bearing using the socket method, this is a must. Way faster than the rod method.
Underneath it i have my hammer and impact socket i use with that knipex
Off pic will be in comments

For a challenge, i removed one tool. If you can spot it, you are worthy of repairing aircraft maybe.
 
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Aircraftmechanicxav

Active member
Joined
Nov 19, 2021
Messages
25
20211121_161522.jpg
Here you can see my offset key. Really impressed by the tekton off set key. I also have a tap and die set and stubby ratcheting 12 pts in there. Gearwrench inna tekton case but its because i prefer the tekton stubby 6pts that i foamed in the drawers
 

Jay H 237

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Apr 24, 2005
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Torrington, CT
Nice! Reminds me of when NissanCrawler was active here and showing off his aviation box.

By the way, locking wire pliers are also used in the railroad world too, you'll find the wired bolts on traction motor cases and some other areas.
 

4xdog

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Aug 18, 2012
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Location
Santa Fe, NM
How do you do tool control on something like your Snap-on ratcheting screwdriver with loose bits in the handle?

I’ve been a passenger many times on the Dash 7 and Dash 8. I always liked those planes.
 
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Aircraftmechanicxav

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How do you do tool control on something like your Snap-on ratcheting screwdriver with loose bits in the handle?

I’ve been a passenger many times on the Dash 7 and Dash 8. I always liked those planes.
I have a little bit tray in the top of my toolbox but yeah those can be tricky to do tool control for those
 
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Aircraftmechanicxav

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Nov 19, 2021
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How do you do tool control on something like your Snap-on ratcheting screwdriver with loose bits in the handle?

I’ve been a passenger many times on the Dash 7 and Dash 8. I always liked those planes.
They are really well built. Way way waaaaaaaay better than atr. Want to remove a fuel panel on a dash 8? No problem. One man job, an hour and its open and another hour to close it. Wanna do the same on the atr (i kid you not) 4 man job, 6 hours to remove it, then you gotta clean all screws because they are all wet install in sealant, then you got to clean the frame off the sealant and the back of the fuel panel. Then to close it, another 4 man job, but this time you have to apply the sealant before. Oh amd if you bust a dome nut, well you got to do everything all over again. And i mean from the removing part and including the cleaning pf screws.

A 2 hour job on a dash 8 is a 40 hour job on an atr.

I love the dash 8 although it has some quirk that if you dont know it it will litterally kill you. As if you have to work in the landing gear are, absolutly put the door pin as if someone put the hydraulics one, it will close the door with you in it. Also the maintenance manual on dash 8 is full of mistake in it that it become funny and sad when you see someone follow it and then realizing they messed up because they followed the instructions.
For exemple if you want to install the exhaust tube that goes from the engine and pass through the landing gear bay towards the back, the procedure tell you install the tube, torque the nut, apply the locking wire on the trims and THEN install the upper shroud, except you cant install it because you already install the middle section. It has to be put at same time as you put the middle section, 2 hours ago.
Or when you remove the inboard flap (the outboard flap is different) it tell you, remove the bolt, remove the failsafe bushing, remove the fairing that block it and 4 other step and after those 4 step it tell you to hold the flap with two other person and warn you that its heavy. The thing is that warning should be at the beggining because as soon as you remove the failsafe, the flap will be disconnected and will drop. On other plane if you disconnect it completly you are tottaly fine, on embraer it will go vertically and you can leave it like that while you go get someone else, on the atr, it will pivot on an axle once its disconnected and you can even leave it there for the whole check. But on a dash8 if you do the same, it will fall and crush you

I still lpve the dash 8, i could go on about how you can electrocute yourself while opening the cockpit even with power being off in the plane but you get my point
 
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Aircraftmechanicxav

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Nov 19, 2021
Messages
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Jesus, I'm a rude old fart, putting myself out there. Xav, your setup looks magnificent. You are a credit to the profession.
And I learned long ago that the mechanics save our butts every day.
Bill S
Thank you very much Captain. And most mechanic always have the same passion for flying and plane as pilot have. And my supervisor told me, what the difference between an aircraft mechanic and a doctor. If a doctor screw up, only one person die, and so that why there is so much paperwork and double inspection in that field and verification and whatnot
 
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Mikeske

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I am a retired Boeing mechanic or at least that was day job. Nice setup and for the first 20 odd years the mechanic provided his own tools then Boeing went to tool control and my 27" Waterloo made box went home chock full of Bonney tools. Once Boeing provided the tools everything was shadowed and total tool control and there always was at the end of shift the mad rush to find a missing tool.
 

warbird1

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Oct 24, 2021
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Been there and done that; spent 14 years working on Warbirds. For those, I had to have a set of BS wrenches for the Merlin, plus metric stuff for the Broussards. Also had all the specialty tools in the box; compression tester, fuel injection gauges, dimpling tools, Dzus tools and all that... Best job I ever had...
 

mogandave

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Nov 4, 2021
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Bangkok
Nice setup. Incidentally, those Sioux nut-runners with the reverse button on top are the sh*t for tek-screws!
 

Ilikeike

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Northern Ca.
I am a retired Boeing mechanic or at least that was day job. Nice setup and for the first 20 odd years the mechanic provided his own tools then Boeing went to tool control and my 27" Waterloo made box went home chock full of Bonney tools. Once Boeing provided the tools everything was shadowed and total tool control and there always was at the end of shift the mad rush to find a missing tool.
Yep, Missing tool = Grounded jet when I was a mechanic, for Uncle Sam. F-16s
 

Firebrick43

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May 12, 2015
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West central Indiana
I remember spending 3 days looking for a 1/2 socket in an unheated hanger in Osan S korea in December. It was on a Ahw1 supercobra. The mech swore he dropped it while sitting on the stub wing, we found it finally about 3 feet higher. He was persona non grata for a while. I wanted to feed him thru the FOD sucking 16's operating next door.

I am surprised that they allow flawed maintenance manuals?
 

APEowner

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Oct 2, 2009
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Sunny, New Mexico
OP, Thanks for sharing. I enjoy reading about how other industries work.

BTW: safety wire is also used on race cars and motorcycles. I have a pair of those pliers in my shop toolbox and in the race car trailer.
 

zmotorsports

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Very nice setup.

A friend of a friend is an aviation mechanic and the last time he came to my old shop he mentioned how many tools I had and I joked with him about how I'd have to have 5 toolboxes of my same size if I had to shadow foam all of my tools. :ROFLMAO: So glad that I don't have to do that but I do like the organizational appearance of it.
 

Mikeske

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Yep, Missing tool = Grounded jet when I was a mechanic, for Uncle Sam. F-16s
Yes it was the same when I was in the Air Force on C-141's and C-5's along with all the Boeing aircraft I worked on. Yep missing tools you must find the tool and all aircraft mechanic has done it.
 

WAS Jr

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Nov 8, 2014
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Did Commutair take over that airframe or did it come back with aha?
My understanding is that aha is using planes pulled out of the desert and Commutair got ours. Ours were the updated LRs and XRs, very useful models with essentially no weight restrictions.
 

Mikeske

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Sweet set up!

How is the foam cut out for the tools?
There is several ways The slow way, The interesting way and the smelly way. The slow way is with a sharp razor, The interesting way is a laser cuts it and the smelly way is a broad tipped soldering gun. I am sure there is many ways to cut the foam. When I shadowed my box at work I used a broad tipped soldering gun and a then a small razor blade the cut out the bottom.
 
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