Thanks to you guys, I been stocking up on lot of cool Japanese tools for past few months and I finally got to use some of these tools extensively during the timing belt and water pump change for the 2000 Toyota Solara. What surprised me the most was which tools I ended up using the most. Before I started the work, I thought it would be my Koken Zeal series but ended up being the following four from the top:
1. KTC Hose Clip Plier AE932
2. Koken 3/8 Swivel Head Ratchet 3776N
3. KTC 3/8 swivel ratchet long BRSW3L
4. Engineer Nejisaurus PZ-57
Hose clip plier needs no explanation. Made things so much easier than using standard needle nose plier or even compared to Knipex Cobras.
Koken and KTC swivel head ratchet really surprised me. Ability to angle things made so much easier to access the nut and bolts I need it to get to (thanks Toyota for cramming everything in a weird way, unlike Honda). Should of got swivel heads long time ago.
And the one I was most impressed with was the Nejisaurus PZ-57. I was teaching my son how to use torque wrench and allowed him to screw in a 10mm bolt for the back timing belt cover that is screwed into the aluminum engine block, right below the valve cover. He went too fast, wasn't holding the torque wrench correctly, and the bolt snapped (completely my fault.....bad teacher). So I had to stare at this thing to ask myself do I drill, get some bolt extractor tool, etc. knowing that if I chose the wrong method, I can make things worse (bolt gets further stuck, metal shavings going into engine, so forth) I even thought of taking the valve cover off just to get access from the other side which would have been a pain (thanks again Toyota!). 30 minutes has passed. Then I thought of this Nejisaurus. I wish I took a picture before extracting but it looked as if the broken bolt has nothing extended to bite into. Nejisaurus was able to grab what I believe to be 0.1mm of the edge of the bolt and it created enough friction, bite to turn......I mean wholly ****! Had to show it to my son immediately (so he won't feel bad) and my wife because that's how elated I was. Worth every penny and then some.
Honorable mention to Koken nut gripper sockets. They were also handy taking bolts on and off in tight spaces without dropping them into a Black Hole.