bczygan
Well-known member
What exactly is the difference?
And what are the most needed sizes?
Bill
And what are the most needed sizes?
Bill
different terms for the same type of wrench
sizes depend on what you're working on
Yup, same thing.
Most common use is brake fittings, larger tube nuts are better suited with flare nut crows feet and a ratchet.
But snapon. 8-14mm, and 3/16, 7/16, 1/2, 9/16. Pick which fits the rotted nut the best.
If it's too rusted to budge without turning the line as well -- usually when replacing wheel cylinders -- I'd just get the double-flaring kit out. It's not a big deal. Again, I would work on cars were nothing was preformed.
if there's enough space between the backing plate, hub and such, you can pull the wheel cylinder out a bit and spin it off the flare nut that's seized to the line. I've done that a few times, including on a '96 chevy k1500 I use to have
if you are working on GM fuel filters I highly suggest a 20mm Line Wrench.

Being in the rust belt, I usually break the line when removing it, so while having the proper tool might help sometimes with that, the real reason I want them is to install things correctly and safely.
Bill
They're different terms for the same wrench. I have both SK and Snap-on sets. I would use them on old domestic cars (1940s-1970s) from the South. Some from the Gulf Coast. So, not the Rust Belt, but old and occasionally really rusty (Corpus Christi cars).
I couldn't tell the difference between my SK and Snap-on set, the latter purchased new with the student discount. I would get SKs or Snap-ons if they were the same price. But I would pass on everything else.
If it's too rusted to budge without turning the line as well -- usually when replacing wheel cylinders -- I'd just get the double-flaring kit out. It's not a big deal. Again, I would work on cars were nothing was preformed.
This question almost always gets this answer -- SK or SO -- and from my experience there's a reason for it. SK is a very good value.
This post convinced me to get this:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000TQ5136/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Arriving tomorrow by 9 PM... I'm in a hurry to fix my catastrophically-failed brakes.
thanks, Man!
There are even the ratcheting flare nut wrenches out now,Tribus Tools makes them and not cheap to buy paying Snap On prices for them.One wrench is $80.00.USA made with a lifetime warranty
Looks like they expanded and/or modified the old Bonney/Cam Lok wrench
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