2ndGearRubber
Well-known member
And now I'm organizing, because my drawers look like a wreck.
Basically all the brands LOL.
Most are by set. Some like the flare nut wrenches are by size. So all the 7/9 wrenches from all the sets, the. All the 10/8s, etc. First drawer is all SAE and crow feet. Second is all metric plus the SAE line wrenches, last is cart.
I don't like to suffer. The 3 sets on my cart do most of the work. Wright grip, a pile for bleeder and brake pins, gearwrench xl and mountain offset flex reversable.
Cart -
Wright grip 8-24mm. Pile of FACOM thin wrenches for caliper pins, some bleeder wrenches, from VIM and Matco. Yeah, it's a pile, no better way. 5 piece mountain spline double box flex head ratcheting, and above that 8-22 gear wrench XLs. AMAZING wrench set.
Final wrench is a cornwell 1". I use this to open 55 gallon drums of oil. Whack plastic cap to crack it, pry up with open end, then stick open end in the metal plug cap, wedge it against the edge and twist the plug open.
What set do you consider to be: AMAZING, per above post?
Gearwrench XL. I've had those about 10 years. Impacted against the ratcheting mechanism, yanking and jerking on them to break stuff free. Tough tool and a great design.
I'd consider that XL design to be the most useful shape other than combo wrenches.
What combo wrenches come to mind?
I will order a set of the XLs.
He made the comment it was very rare that he didn't have a back log of work. I'm not sure how much diagnostic stuff he was doing vs getting handed a pre-diagnosed work. That would probably drive a guy like me insane.For a dealer? If they let you fall into a niche, yes, I would advise simply maximizing the niche. Issue being is if you're down on work, and now you're working on the used car trade ins, or waiting for a scan tool without which you cannot proceed on a car, etc. Do you have more than one bay? Or is it 20 bays and 20 techs? Or they may not do niches. So you're at VW working on everything from a 2003 beetle to a 2010 town and country rebadge to a 2022 Tiguan. Still easier than all makes, IMO, but at all make repair shops you're shipping wild stuff out the door anyway. I ain't pulling the chassis of a Rover to put chains in it, or dropping out the drive train for a rear main seal in an X6. Hell I'm not swapping an engine in that chevy truck either.
I 100% agree, shallow drawers are a big waste. I specifically look for boxes which don't have those, 4" is an acceptable height IMO for storage. Lockers are the way to go IMO for bulk storage outside industrial cabinets. I have one of those too, got it for a steal, and it's great. But without a fork-jack I can't move them much at all, and whatever price I can get on a lista adds a few hundred since I need a lift gate. The savings start to thin out IF one isn't loading drawers down in the lockers. For some of the heavier drawers, it's still sub 50lb in a locker. Mostly cases of threading and repairing tools. A drawer full of scan tools weighs next to nothing obviously. If I had a pallet jack? Or a fork lift? And the floor didn't massively leak through the foundation near my boxes? I'd be all over industrial cabinets, I love the look, the CLACK of the slides, etc.
Lista toolboxes? Very tempting.