

You will be welcome, I’m Admin over there.Thanks for the help, I'll check out that facebook group.
I assume that's the idea of it, but the sequence of sizes never seems to be of any practical use!It does give you two separate spanners of each size for use at the same time. Same reason sometimes given for having sets of double open end and double ring end, rather than a single set of combination spanners.
These should have been made with both ends the same size. The 6 point to break something lose and the 12 point to take it off faster in tight spaces. I'll buy Open-end and Box-end wrenches in the combinations I would use most. 10x13, 15x17 for my VW Beetle or for Japanese cars 10x12, 14x17.
What are you looking for exactly, 10mm Britool spanners only?They just caught my eye when browsing.
There doesn't seem to be any new old stock left of anything in 10mm, otherwise I had my eye on picking up a couple of spanners from the homeland brand while I still can.
Nothing exactly reallyWhat are you looking for exactly, 10mm Britool spanners only?
Might consider King ****, made in England tools though. Very good spanners and sockets.Nothing exactly reallyJust would like to have something (or a few) Britool things that are useful, thinking maybe some type of spanners in 10,13,17,19. But that would be an annoying set without a 10mm. There is new old stock at Prime Tools and Trademarque tools.
i don’t have them in a catalog, and have not seen one, but did find this on line …..Looks like a later Britool Hallmark.
Bob H might have a catalogue.
, your guarantee of quality.M = Midget, = 9/32” drive.Trawled through this from start to finish.
In a post from 2018 (page 11), ' 3/8 deep bi-hex sockets that say Britool - England - MDMB - SIZES10-19.'
If I am correct, M = 9/32" drive D = deep, M = metric, B = bi- hexagon.
Off to dig out my Britool oddities. Will stick some pictures up here soon.







The Britool and Gordon MAY have been made overseas. Bob H will Know. I have the Gordon with /|\, not great.
Now I hope I’m not diluting thread too much, but I thought you might all like to hear how a 34 year old Britool ratchet has shown a brand new Stahlwille who‘s boss!
Now I was issued (actually they took it out my pay in 52 weekly instalments!) this little 1/4 drive ratchet in 1992 by British Rail as part of my apprenticeship toolkit, and I still have most of the tools, though this little thing is in better condition than most of the tools (Purely because it was only used to do up BA sized electrical connections and everything else was used to pull crusty trains apart). I’ve no idea of the model number so shout if you have an I.D. But I can vouch its never been apart or dunked in ATF, its as delivered when I was 17!
Solid cast construction, low drag backlash and plenty of teeth make it a winner. The rubber/plastic handle is as good as new too. (Side note the handle on my same age 1/2 drive is just as good, even if the ratchet itself is a bit chrome scabby these days). I think - but I'm guessing - this is a forged body.
So onto the Stahlwille: It‘s not heavy - but like the Britool it also has a nice density to it and has quite a precise action, whilst still being quite sturdy. However though the new kid on the block from Germany feels just as sturdy as the old Britool, but is sadly no where near as precise. The handles rather nice and feels just like their excellent (Witte made) screwdrivers.
There is an if…. In a nutshell had I felt the Deutsch wunderkind in my palm in a shop, I’d have left it there on the shelf, despite how great the internet says it should be! The fit and finish is excellent, but the mechanism is nothing to write home about. I paid £18 ($24) for what I think is an ex-military stores new stock, a new in wrapper would be theoretically £50+ ($68).
The 1/4 drive Halfords ratchet below (UK autoparts chain, and part of another lot) could be bought for £14.40 ($19.60) over the counter and is a very good generic Taiwanese ratchet and (whispers quietly) has a better smoother action, but not Britool smooth.
Last up (just because) is this mid 80’s Gordon ratchet. It has the last gasp Gordon logo, before the brand vanished forever. Actually quite nice casting, but this example has lived a hard life and is sloppier than an exotic dancer in her 70’s… I guess the length meant you could put quite a bit of force through it which led to its demise. The square grips quite nice.
I would like to try a box fresh example one day though.
Apologises for the thread drift![]()
Sorry to disappoint, but Far too new for me. I expect they were made overseas, but have no evidence to support this supposition.The
The Britool and Gordon MAY have been made overseas. Bob H will Know. I have the Gordon with /|\, not great.
Some of those Halfords 100 tooth ratchets are very weak, yours looks like regular type. Warranty is good though.
That's a nice useful set, especially with the additions and those Allen hex drivers.
That's a nice useful set, especially with the additions and those Allen hex drivers.
Was your box originally black? I have a box for mine which looks black but it's been repainted in the past and is in poor condition. The pieces are on my wall board but it would be nice to refinish the box as original.
Thanks Alec. I reckon this one was originally a dark red hammered finish. It probably had a stick on label on the outside, and there's no evidence of any insert at all.This one was always black. They went red in the early 50s kind of period, by the mid 50s all the black ones were sold off, I'm not sure exactly when the transition was.
I prefer this "era" of hex sets and theres no ambiguity when you go to the shelf to grab a set
If yours has a riveted aluminium badge, with an etched aluminium legend inside, it would fit for a black box. They progressed to riveted plastic labels, plastic inserts, stuck-on labels etc as time progressed. More knowledgeable types may know more accurately.
Alec.


Good workmate too!Thanks Alec. I reckon this one was originally a dark red hammered finish. It probably had a stick on label on the outside, and there's no evidence of any insert at all.
The actual structure of the box is pretty good, it's just filthy and very poor exterior paint. Hardly any rust, I suppose the oily crud has protected it!
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Thanks, I bought one of the first Workmates ever.Good workmate too!
Do you use that set day to day? How does it compare to using a modern set?

