4x4gearhead
Well-known member
Adjustables arent good to rely on for everything but they have their place. I use them a lot when I have to rescue a leaking machine off the hill or something, a lot easier to carry than a wrench set.
I just saw a Diamond Caulk 4" at a swap meet on Sunday with a $50 price tag on it...I was glad that I paid $5 for one just like it at the last swap.![]()
My biggest use for one lately has been a 1 1/2" nut that I didn't have a regular wrench (or socket) for... but a 12" adjustable would fit and did the job.
Hitch ball?
(Makes me wonder of those rotational arrows are there by design; they are in the business of selling tools after all..)Adjustables arent good to rely on for everything but they have their place. I use them a lot when I have to rescue a leaking machine off the hill or something, a lot easier to carry than a wrench set.
The 4" wrenches are a hot collectable. Some bring as much as $50. I have a nice collection on display in my office.

Bingo! Give that man a cigar!
We carried adjustable wrenches on every piece of farm equipment. The hole in the end of the handle sure makes it easy to hang that wrench up on the tractor with some wire. When you break down in the middle of a hayfield and the truck is a half-mile away, its a walk back to the toolbox on the truck.

GeneralDisorder I owe you an apology I reread your post I was wrong it kinda sounded like you were saying mechanics cant problem solve. Thats welders... haha totally joking im one of those unfortunate souls also.
In plumbing there are a lot of things like Union joints. You can use a monkey wrench but an adjustable works much better. On water spickets and other fittings they are very handy.
I use one on my Delta Unisaw when I change blades. I like it better the the thin wrench that came with the saw.
I use several on my 26 ft. sail boat that is on a trailer. I use it to tighten the bolts when I put up the mast and other things.
Before the bicycles had a flip quick release I could rebuild my bike form the gourn up with one as a kid.
I used one the other day behind the garden tractor wheel when I jacked up the front end. The tractor did not roll.
I have them form 2 inches all the way to 24 inches. when you go to putting on double nuts on the bottom of the hitch ball they do come in handy. I just grab to huge ones and crank. I have wrenches that will do it but the handles are much larger and I can get more pull without bothering my hand.
Now for the best use of an adjustable wrench. When you go to streighten out sheet metal you can get it to fit any thickness and you can streighten many things with one. I have been doing that for 50 years. I can take a bent piece and really get it streight. Then I can take a flat head hammer and get it flat as a pancake.
Sometimes I am bending flat stock and need to break it a a certin point. I put the adjustable wrench on the end and put pressure on the piece while taping on the piece with a hammer. It really works better than a pliers or tongs at times. It does not slip off and it is tight. Then it does not need a squeezing force to keep it in place while putting pressure on it.
There are a hundrend and one reasons I have 40 of them.
The 4" wrenches are a hot collectable. Some bring as much as $50. I have a nice collection on display in my office.
Why an adjustable. It is one of the 10 necessary tools in every box.
I bumped a tree backing up and bent the heavy bracket on my mowing deck that hold the height wheel. Today I took the wheel off and got out the 24 incher and streightened the bracket right up. Now you never would know it was bent. Beating on things will cause other things to bend or break loose a weld and really leave a mess. A simple tug around with the old adjustable wrench works every time it is tryed.
I never strike an adjustable wrench. There is a right way to use one. I see people putting them on and pulling in the wrong direction. The jaw should be on the inside of the pull. It puts the pressure at the joint and head not the jaw. It drives me nuts when I see someone on TV or the internet put pressure on the wrench in the wrong direction.
Never leave home without one. You never know when you will need to knock someone out. LOL

I personally disagree with the manufactures "recommended rotation". The reason is the usual way these "wear out" is from a sprung jaw, and it's always the moving jaw that gets sprung. Why?
I wasn't aware you could wear out an adjustable, I thought once forged they were here till the end of time.
Knipex pliers wrenches for me. But for bigger jobs I need an adjustable because I can't get enough leverage on the Knipex, even the 12" ones I have.
Would be nice if someone made a locking adjustable in a large sizes, 12" or more:
www.amazon.com/Stanley-85-610-10-Inch-MaxGrip-Adjustable/dp/B00009OYGZ
Anyone ever tried on of these?
I noticed alot of people seem to really value adjustable wrenches, I dont understand why.
Im sure I will receive valid answers, im curious. Maybe it is something that doesn't apply to the mechanics trade? very possible. What do you guys use them for?
61 posts.......... No one mentioned they are another thing to collect and fill the drawer(s) of my chest(s).
![]()
Oh but you did not read the all the post. I said the 4" ones were very collectable and that I had them on display in my office.
LOL
In plumbing there are a lot of things like Union joints. You can use a monkey wrench but an adjustable works much better. On water spickets and other fittings they are very handy.
I use one on my Delta Unisaw when I change blades. I like it better the the thin wrench that came with the saw.
I use several on my 26 ft. sail boat that is on a trailer. I use it to tighten the bolts when I put up the mast and other things.
Before the bicycles had a flip quick release I could rebuild my bike form the gourn up with one as a kid.
I used one the other day behind the garden tractor wheel when I jacked up the front end. The tractor did not roll.
I have them form 2 inches all the way to 24 inches. when you go to putting on double nuts on the bottom of the hitch ball they do come in handy. I just grab to huge ones and crank. I have wrenches that will do it but the handles are much larger and I can get more pull without bothering my hand.
Now for the best use of an adjustable wrench. When you go to streighten out sheet metal you can get it to fit any thickness and you can streighten many things with one. I have been doing that for 50 years. I can take a bent piece and really get it streight. Then I can take a flat head hammer and get it flat as a pancake.
Sometimes I am bending flat stock and need to break it a a certin point. I put the adjustable wrench on the end and put pressure on the piece while taping on the piece with a hammer. It really works better than a pliers or tongs at times. It does not slip off and it is tight. Then it does not need a squeezing force to keep it in place while putting pressure on it.
There are a hundrend and one reasons I have 40 of them.
The 4" wrenches are a hot collectable. Some bring as much as $50. I have a nice collection on display in my office.
Why an adjustable. It is one of the 10 necessary tools in every box.
I bumped a tree backing up and bent the heavy bracket on my mowing deck that hold the height wheel. Today I took the wheel off and got out the 24 incher and streightened the bracket right up. Now you never would know it was bent. Beating on things will cause other things to bend or break loose a weld and really leave a mess. A simple tug around with the old adjustable wrench works every time it is tryed.
I never strike an adjustable wrench. There is a right way to use one. I see people putting them on and pulling in the wrong direction. The jaw should be on the inside of the pull. It puts the pressure at the joint and head not the jaw. It drives me nuts when I see someone on TV or the internet put pressure on the wrench in the wrong direction.
Never leave home without one. You never know when you will need to knock someone out. LOL

For automotive use, they're garbage. With the exception of using very large ones with a very fat open end for loosening stubborn tie rod style adjusters.
They actually have a place in the construction industry though. For large fasteners and times where you need 2 of the same size wrench to loosen something. You're not gonna carry 2 full wrench sets in your tool bag.
Working in underground mining you carry a shifter on your tool belt as it is easier and lighter to carry one shifter than a heap of spanners. And if your real lucky you can get a shammer which is a shifter with a metal block forged to the side of it so you can use it as a hammer or a shifter. Excuse me using the word spanners instead of wrenches it's an Aussie thing.
Can't say I've ever heard of an adjustable wrench called that before."Shifter" must be an Aussie thing too. Only "shifter" I'm familiar with is the stick in the middle of my car that I change gears with.Can't say I've ever heard of an adjustable wrench called that before.
I,ve heard older men (mostly coal miners) call them "Movers" in West Yorkshire![]()
I have quite the selection of adjustables. I used to use them for hose fittings and general plumbing, but they pretty much gather dust now that I have a full range of the Knipex pliers wrenches from 6" to 12". Those things are awesome! Sometimes you can't replace the adjustable, but it's very rare. The pliers wrench just about grips anything and does it better than a adjustable.