1st. Screwdrivers... metric flat blade screwdrivers are not the right sizes for electrical fittings. I would suggest Klein, but stay away from metric. Obviously, any brand of Phillips is fine.
2nd. Linemen’s and diagonals... D-2000 Klein’s seem expensive, but they are designed to cut through thicker hardened metal. They are absolutely worth the extra cost.
3rd. Level... do not even look at torpedo levels without Neodymium magnets.
4th. Hammer... rip claw with fiberglass handle.
Wire strippers, razor knife, and tape measures are very personal. Just make sure that you have a modern tape measure with a decent amount of standout.
Every electrician should have a half round file with a handle.
Bring a Sharpie and a pencil.
Beyond all of this, you will eventually need 2 pairs Channellocks, an adjustable wrench, nut drivers, ratchet and sockets, Allen keys, tick tracer, voltage tester with continuity, framing square (a trim square is better, because it is smaller, needle nose pliers, ratcheting wrenches (at least 7/16”, 9/16”, and 3/4”), and a no-dog for bending offsets in pipe.
As far as a tool pouch goes... find out what the other guys in your company are using. Top of the line is Occidental Leather and livable is the Carharrt canvas one. The Carharrt one doubles as a perfect tool holder in a boom lift.
A small magnetic bowl will make sure any hardware you remove from anything does not get misplaced.
A canvas zipper bag for consumables (drill bits, hole saws, unibit , taps...) is good to have. It keeps all your consumables in one place. Always keep your taps taped to the corresponding drill bit.
Farther along, you will want a machinist square for layout, tin snips, a tap handle, drywall saw, folding inside measuring ruler, and Sta-con crimpers.
2nd. Linemen’s and diagonals... D-2000 Klein’s seem expensive, but they are designed to cut through thicker hardened metal. They are absolutely worth the extra cost.
3rd. Level... do not even look at torpedo levels without Neodymium magnets.
4th. Hammer... rip claw with fiberglass handle.
Wire strippers, razor knife, and tape measures are very personal. Just make sure that you have a modern tape measure with a decent amount of standout.
Every electrician should have a half round file with a handle.
Bring a Sharpie and a pencil.
Beyond all of this, you will eventually need 2 pairs Channellocks, an adjustable wrench, nut drivers, ratchet and sockets, Allen keys, tick tracer, voltage tester with continuity, framing square (a trim square is better, because it is smaller, needle nose pliers, ratcheting wrenches (at least 7/16”, 9/16”, and 3/4”), and a no-dog for bending offsets in pipe.
As far as a tool pouch goes... find out what the other guys in your company are using. Top of the line is Occidental Leather and livable is the Carharrt canvas one. The Carharrt one doubles as a perfect tool holder in a boom lift.
A small magnetic bowl will make sure any hardware you remove from anything does not get misplaced.
A canvas zipper bag for consumables (drill bits, hole saws, unibit , taps...) is good to have. It keeps all your consumables in one place. Always keep your taps taped to the corresponding drill bit.
Farther along, you will want a machinist square for layout, tin snips, a tap handle, drywall saw, folding inside measuring ruler, and Sta-con crimpers.
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