Wamsutta
Well-known member
All the tool manufacturers seem to have their own specified wrench length. How do they arrive at that length?
Thickness is also governed by the standard.
I really doubt that any company interviews any mechanic about combination wrench. These are pretty figured out nowadays after all these years. They have an r&d department and maybe they get some use input from some mechanics they employ themselves. But that's just my estimateThey survey hundreds of thousands of mechanics, and find the ideal length for a wrench, based on where it will fit, when it will interfere, easy to carry, etc. Then they build it to whatever their accounting group thinks is cheapest.
The part about surveying mechanics is just sarcasm. Your will learn that there is a lot of sarcasm here on GJ. The real message is the part about Accounting and Cheapest.I really doubt that any company interviews any mechanic about combination wrench ...
Ok, I get it now. Bean countersThe part about surveying mechanics is just sarcasm. Your will learn that there is a lot of sarcasm here on GJ. The real message is the part about Accounting and Cheapest.

We rave about the strength of WrightGrip open ends, but truth be told some of that strength comes from thickness. Thickest in the pack.I wish Wright was the same length as Snap-on standard length.
That's what she said.What the engineers do, is decide how thick it needs to be not to flex at the given length.
Yes, that's why I said they use a length that is convenient, and it's also what the standards were based on.
I think the strive towards longer wrenches is more due to "tool culture" and how tools are used today VS how they were used in the past. I doubt manufacturers "hit a wall" 50 years ago in regards to what was possible with the steel at the time. Just that wrenches weren't used in exactly the same use as they are today.
For many cases a standard length wrench (e.g. stahlwille 13) is a good balance between being easy to handle and being strong enough to torque stuff down as hard as needed.
Right. And I think there’s room for a little variety of this sort on the market.We rave about the strength of WrightGrip open ends, but truth be told some of that strength comes from thickness. Thickest in the pack.