oldschoolcraft
Well-known member
As a home gamer I haven't had much experience working with panel clip tools or interior work. It's come to my attention that there's a vast array of different tools, and I dont understand what each one is for, and if we "need" one of each or if some are duplicative of each other. I dont know if these are different ways of doing the same thing.
I think all of these tools can be broken down into two categories:
My goal from this thread is to come up with a minimalist wish list of these tools that let me handle anything I might encounter. Minimalist doesnt mean one or two. It means not having duplicative ways of approaching the exact same thing. If I need 10 different tools, so be it. I think when it comes to interior trim, the plastic can be easily scuffed and damaged, so having the exact right tool rather than forcing the wrong tool to work is probably worth having a collection to avoid damaging the part of the car that people spend the most time looking at. But I dont want to wind up with a full drawer of these and only ever use two.
Here's the variety of stuff I've seen:
Aircraft skin wedge tool. I've seen versions with two different sizes to pry different things.

Angled fork prybar tool

The Prybar fork tools come in a variety of sizes and also in straight, instead of angled.

Then we have some wedge apart panel clip pliers of some kind:

And then there's these for clips that look like they just get underneath and pull up:

I think all of these tools can be broken down into two categories:
- Clip-tools designed to remove the plastic clips by getting under them and allowing you to pop them out
- Wedging pry bars designed to get under the trim to separate it after the clips are removed, or for trim that friction snaps without clips
My goal from this thread is to come up with a minimalist wish list of these tools that let me handle anything I might encounter. Minimalist doesnt mean one or two. It means not having duplicative ways of approaching the exact same thing. If I need 10 different tools, so be it. I think when it comes to interior trim, the plastic can be easily scuffed and damaged, so having the exact right tool rather than forcing the wrong tool to work is probably worth having a collection to avoid damaging the part of the car that people spend the most time looking at. But I dont want to wind up with a full drawer of these and only ever use two.
Here's the variety of stuff I've seen:
Aircraft skin wedge tool. I've seen versions with two different sizes to pry different things.

Angled fork prybar tool

The Prybar fork tools come in a variety of sizes and also in straight, instead of angled.

Then we have some wedge apart panel clip pliers of some kind:

And then there's these for clips that look like they just get underneath and pull up:








