racinfarmer
Well-known member
Feel free you fire up a Youtube channel for yourself and do it your way.It was unfair of me to call him an idiot. He's a buffoon.
Feel free you fire up a Youtube channel for yourself and do it your way.It was unfair of me to call him an idiot. He's a buffoon.
He's not a hater.Would the results be different if he used a laboratory-grade borosilicate vessel?
I thought your problem with the allen key video was that he didn’t run them hard enough, that he should have used harder fasteners. Are you saying he was too hard on the side cutters, yet too easy on the allen keys?
You’re just a hater![]()
I will stay with my Chinese made hex keys.I expected a good showing from Wera/Wiha but PB Swiss was a disappointment.
Another useless test by project farm.
1) As already mentioned, the SS BHCS is not an appropriate fastener for this test at all.
2) His jig to hold the wrenches was janky at best, and you're not going to get accurate torque measurements with all that twisting he had going on.
I don’t think he’s dishonest or anything, but every time I see one of his test setups, all I see is 10 ways it’s useless.
This test was trash
Terrible jig that relies on him not the tool
Bolt is stripping not the tool in many cases
________
Normally I don't mind PF videos but this is seriously flawed
Or you secretly are Project FarmWow. Yesterday, I was thinking about how it would be nice if Project Farm did a video on allen head tools. Project Farm must read my mind
Haha. The plot thickens...Or you secretly are Project Farm![]()
The oil in a coffee pot is merely a volatility test. You could do the test in any vessel as long as the weight was known and the temp was reasonably consistent.He tests oil in a coffee pot, tests side cutters by cutting drill bits. He's an idiot.
I could smash the Asian ones and then party like it's 1999Haha. The plot thickens...
No, I could never be Project Farm. I enjoy occasonally watching his and other tool tests posted online, but I don't have the stomach to break brand new perfectly functional tools myself. I value tools too much... even the cheap ones.
Craftsman StanleyNot really in the case of Bondhus.
The Craftsman did perform very well on average though.
Was the Stanley Craftsman, or Sears Craftsman?
The only thing this test really proved, is that the Stanley made brands tend to perform above average( Craftsman( if Stanley Craftsman), Facom), and that with the rest of the brands it’s sort of a crapshoot as far as “best performer”, if you choose one of the top 6-8 brands he tested.
No brand performed at consistently the top few places when the different hex key sizes were tested.
Catastrophic failure may be worse than bending, since it can lead to injury, or potential foreign object damage, but PF rated the keys that broke, more highly than the ones that bent, or which gave up.
That said, I’d still purchase Bondhus.
I would consider PB Swiss.
I like Wiha and Wera and would purchase the keys if I needed a set of a different style like T-handles.
I would also purchase Craftsman.
The Eklind was sort of a disappointment.
He very creative on his methods and not an idiot. His tests are not scientific and cannot be reproduced therefore does not make statistical sense. When doing the stress test with the BHCS, he used the same wrench on other tests and should have used brand new tool for each test. All of his tests are just a guide and not to be taken seriously.He's an idiot and his tests are meaningless.
No self-respecting tradesman would use diagonal cutters to cut twist drills. They would obviously use their co-workers lineman’s.Would the results be different if he used a laboratory-grade borosilicate vessel?
I thought your problem with the allen key video was that he didn’t run them hard enough, that he should have used harder fasteners. Are you saying he was too hard on the side cutters, yet too easy on the allen keys?
You’re just a hater![]()
Ditto. It's entertainment. People watch marble races too....Honestly, I generally avoid these types of "torture test" videos. All that happens is the ruin of perfectly good tools and equipment. There's never any substantive conclusions to be drawn or any serious inference that can be made. It's entertainment if anything, but that's about it. Apologies to PF fans, but I really don't know why anyone would willingly help line the pockets of creators producing this kind of junk 'science' by watching and helping to promote it.
I've watched many, and I'd disagree.Another useless test by project farm.
Diagonal cutter test to failure for one. I have never seen anyone use diagonal to cut 16d nails much less a drill bit.I've watched many, and I'd disagree.
What are other examples?
Anything can be ground back. Use a ceramic cut off wheel or sanding belt.I just need my hex keys to last longer then they currently do, which means they need to either be easy to grind back to make them fresh again, or harder then the fasteners they will be used on.
In the case of Eklund, they can be ground back!
I was surprised to see the Eklind do as poorly as they did, and surprised to see the SBD Craftsman do as well as they did. I wasn't surprised to see the Wiha and Wera do well considering they are German engineered, but Bondhus still seems to be the best all-around set for the money.
He could have tested all the keys on ONE fastener first....but he needs to measure each fasteners to make sure he's picking out the best / nominal sized ones. Then he should have measured each allen key instead of just giving us the "this one is sloppy" comments.
But the biggest one to me is he doesn't seem to be measuring the fasteners. If variation in allen key production of +/- 0.05mm or so is the difference between a good fit and a poor one, I'd bet the variation in the fasteners is at least that, or more. If testing until the fastener head strips out, you need to know you're starting with a properly sized one. Or at the very least, test the same allen key 15x in different fasteners and take an average.
Yep, button Allen head fasteners are bad news.The bad were clearly shown to be bad but the use of a button head stainless steel bolt was a glaring error as a socket head cap screw would have been vastly superior.
I'm with Bubba Fett on this one. ALL of Project Farm's tests fall short of perfection, but it doesn't matter - it's all data. Use that data to inform your purchases, not dictate them.This wasn't a scientific test, and the method was flawed, however, by using the same type of fasteners for all the brands, that still shows some consistency.
And, your PhD in metallurgy is from Purdue?? Not a bad school. That's an overstatement.This wasn't a scientific test, and the method was flawed, however, by using the same type of fasteners for all the brands, that still shows some consistency. I would have liked to see each wrench measured with micrometer first. I'd also like to see how much for it takes to bend a wrench from each brand. I hope he does another video. Since these all come in sets, he still has plenty left.
I was surprised to see the Eklind do as poorly as they did, and surprised to see the SBD Craftsman do as well as they did. I wasn't surprised to see the Wiha and Wera do well considering they are German engineered, but Bondhus still seems to be the best all-around set for the money.
Edited to add:
If you're clever enough to figure out all the things he did wrong, I think you could probably also use that brainpower to interpret the results into something meaningful.

He could have tested all the keys on ONE fastener first.
Cross section measurements of all the keys would have been great too.
Yeah I just meant fitment.One fastener (that's measured at nominal size) would have been ideal. But based on the shallow and soft fasteners he's using, it looks like the large majority of "failures" are the fastener stripping out, so I assumed using the same fastener for each wouldn't have been an option. So next best thing is to at least make sure each test is done with a correctly sized fastener.
This wasn't a scientific test, and the method was flawed, however, by using the same type of fasteners for all the brands, that still shows some consistency. I would have liked to see each wrench measured with micrometer first. I'd also like to see how much for it takes to bend a wrench from each brand. I hope he does another video. Since these all come in sets, he still has plenty left.
I was surprised to see the Eklind do as poorly as they did, and surprised to see the SBD Craftsman do as well as they did. I wasn't surprised to see the Wiha and Wera do well considering they are German engineered, but Bondhus still seems to be the best all-around set for the money.
Member @RoninB4 worked for Eklind and has stated they lowered the HRC for liability reasons so the keys twist instead of break.I used to have a lot of Eklind t handles, don't know what they did around the mid 2000's but the life seemed to go down. We were doing a lot of fab for a machine builder using tons of good Holokrome or other USA cap screws and the keys just got ate up. We switched to the Bondhus T handles after that.