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Breaker Bar

GGorman04

Member
Joined
Dec 18, 2011
Messages
17
Can anyone recommend a high quality breaker bar?
Primary use will be removing stubborn axle bolts.
Thanks in advance
 
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thedeatons

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 5, 2011
Messages
372
Wright Tools.

There is a 3/4 Wright breaker bar in the Classifieds section right now. 1/2" is pretty easy to find too if you look around on the web.

Impact with an air compressor is the easiest route. Gets 'em every time with no sweat involved!

James
 

5lima30

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2010
Messages
2,442
Location
Mountains of Western NC
I've got a SK/ Sparta 1/2" that is 30 yrs (+,-). I have used it hard and its still in great shape! That being said I'm sure the tool truck ones would be equally as good although they would be more $.
 

jasonreck71

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 30, 2011
Messages
129
Location
Newnan,GA
I have a 24" Thorsen from Fleet Farm. I have put pipes on it and put all 220lbs of my beef on it and looks like the day I bought it. If you don't have a FF near you I would go with one from HF
 

GoBlue

Well-known member
Joined
May 10, 2011
Messages
1,070
Location
Under a car...swearing
Doesnt matter...i replaced my Snap on when it broke with the H.F bar based on all the recomendations from this site. I can be a bit of a snob and would not have looked at it otherwise. Great bar...i sold my snappy on the bay and have not regreted it once.
 
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Drisco Z71

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 17, 2006
Messages
68
Location
NE
I have a 24" Thorsen from Fleet Farm. I have put pipes on it and put all 220lbs of my beef on it and looks like the day I bought it. If you don't have a FF near you I would go with one from HF

That's actually exactly how I broke my 3/4" Thorsen breaker bar...
 

Brad54

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 13, 2006
Messages
4,646
I got a MAC 3/4-drive round-head ratchet at a pawn shop years ago... I think it's 28 inches long? Maybe only 24... anything that doesn't come lose with a 1/2-inch breaker comes lose with with that beast. I have YET to admit defeat to anything I've clapped that bar on.

-Brad
 

Zephyr

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 6, 2011
Messages
130
Location
Thousand Palms CA
I bought a 1/2" 24 in HF breaker bar to break a crank pulley bolt off and I ended up shearing the drive bit off. I will admit I abused the HF bar by standing on it since I didn't have a cheater bar but it was ok till it snapped. Right now I have a 24" Performance Tool breaker bar #W32121 I abuse it from time to time with cheater bars and its built strong have yet to see something it can't break loose.
 
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GGorman04

Member
Joined
Dec 18, 2011
Messages
17
Price range... Will pay more for something that lasts a LONG time!!
Personal experience that happened to me in the past week.
I had an employee buy a hydraulic jack from Pep Boys. A 3 ton model. Made in china.. I kid you not, the second time we used the lift on a 2006 ford econoline van, it would not lift the van off of the jack stands. Unbelievable lack of quality. After seeing this, now I am glad that I spent some extra coin but love my Milwaukee model 20.

Nothing is made to last anymore.. Nothing
 

SCscoutguy

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 23, 2010
Messages
2,229
Location
South Carolina
I have the HF breaker bar and I must say that is one of the greatest values in tools that can be purchased anywhere. I have abused the living daylights out of mine and it is still going strong.
 

WR250F

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 28, 2011
Messages
481
HF and NT both have ~24" versions that have held up well in my use, and I don't think twice about using a $15 breaker for anything I can.

I have a Proto 3/4 I got as a freebie a couple of years ago. It's pretty good, but no way I would spend the bucks on one new.

A breaker bar isn't exactly like a jack, although I understand your looking for something that will hold up.

I've put a 4' cheater on the NT breaker and jumped on it like a ballerina. I was trying to break some rusted caliper bolts on a 82 Ford truck that were solidly frozen. The VIM hex socket bit, the NT breaker and a 4 ft cheater was all it took to finally break it loose after a couple of minutes of jumping on it.

No air was available, I didn't happen to have any PB Blaster on hand where this truck was and didn't have the time even if it was.

Socket bit, breaker and cheater pipe still in 100% condition.

Best $14 and change (on sale) I've ever spent on a tool I don't hesitate to beat on.
 

rtoms

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2011
Messages
69
bb.jpg

best bb ive ever used, snap on 24" hard handle. Im a sucker for hh snap on but this is a legit bb, One hand taking off stubborn lug nuts easy. got mine off ebay used . would buy it again an again
 

dodge610

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 22, 2010
Messages
5,467
Location
North Canton Ohio
I will also jump on the band wagon for the HF 1/2 breaker bar I have run mine thru the wringer and abused it also still keeps coming back for more. So if you want a breaker bar that is gonna get the job done and not break the bank HF is the way to go.
 

MechManiac

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 25, 2010
Messages
79
Location
Trinidad and Tobago.
I have a Wright bar (1/2" drive 16 9/16" long) that I've bobbed up and down on to loosen axle nuts. Those nuts are torqued to 175 ft-lbs and I weigh 160lbs. It has held up quite well in repeated use. One time I was removing stuck lug nuts and the craftsman socket I used broke. The breaker bar was still in great shape. IMHO a Wright tool breaker bar is one tough tool and I really don't see a need to go with 3/4" tooling with Wright for your purpose. (unless it's really really stuck)
I have this:

http://www.royalsupply.com/store/pc/Wright-Tool-4439-Flex-Handle-16-9-16-Contour-Grip-2783p51036.htm

BUT, will recommend their 24" version. PS. Apply PB blaster/kroil before.
 
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