IndyGarage
Well-known member
I may be the only one.
I know there are some here who swear by them.
I bought a set of 6 (edit: correction - the set has 12 wrenches in it) long handle x-beam metric Gearwrenches about 7-8 months ago.
They have a beautiful chrome finish. They feel great in your hand. Actually they feel great to use.
If the #$%@#@$! things only worked.
The very first time I went to use the set, the very first tool I pull out to use - 12mm stopped ratcheting and would just freewheel. Of course 90% of the bolts on that project were 12mm...
The other ones I pulled out worked fine, but it took me 30 minutes of messing with the 12 mm to get it working again. I sprayed it with WD 40 and worked it in and it finally started working.
Because of that crappy experience (I hate fixing tools) I put them on the top shelf and mostly forgot about them. Today I pulled them out again - I've used them maybe 2 other times since.
Darned if I didn't have another bad experience.
I'm working on the floor of the garage trying to get a rusty 9mm bracket loose from my daughters car exhaust - socket on one side, gearwrench on the other - when the stupid gearwrench all the sudden freewheels again. I few choice words were said. I pull it off to see what's up, and instantly recognize that the whole inside drive mechanism as popped out of the wrench. I throw that sucker down and walk back to get a real 9 mm box wrench - steaming with every step.
After finishing the job, and cleaning up, I have to take out the trash and I'm trying to decide whether to drop the gearwrenches into the trash bin, when I decide to look at the wrench and see if it broke or what. When I look at it, I don't think it broke, just came apart. Theres the little "socket" ring, and a tiny little ratchet dog, and a miniscule little coil spring, and then I see this tiny little snap ring, that looks about the diameter of a hair.
I have to go get my magnifying glass and halogen desk lamp to even see how it works. The little spring holds the drive dog into a spline on the outside of the "socket". It drives one direction and ratchets the other. The problem is these parts are tiny - wer'e talking watch spring tiny. It takes me about 30 more minutes of finagling to get the dog and spiring into place then push the dog down while installing the splined socket and then holding it together and wrapping that tiny little snap ring around, without losing it.. Eventually I got it all the way around the socket and it snapped into place. The wrench worked fine after that.
So on two of the half dozen or so times I've used my gearwrenches resulted in 30 minutes or so of repairs to the tools themselves.
I'll give them one more shot, however 3 strikes and they are out of my life.
Does anybody know if other toolmakers make a higher quality version of these tools?
I know there are some here who swear by them.
I bought a set of 6 (edit: correction - the set has 12 wrenches in it) long handle x-beam metric Gearwrenches about 7-8 months ago.
They have a beautiful chrome finish. They feel great in your hand. Actually they feel great to use.
If the #$%@#@$! things only worked.
The very first time I went to use the set, the very first tool I pull out to use - 12mm stopped ratcheting and would just freewheel. Of course 90% of the bolts on that project were 12mm...
The other ones I pulled out worked fine, but it took me 30 minutes of messing with the 12 mm to get it working again. I sprayed it with WD 40 and worked it in and it finally started working.
Because of that crappy experience (I hate fixing tools) I put them on the top shelf and mostly forgot about them. Today I pulled them out again - I've used them maybe 2 other times since.
Darned if I didn't have another bad experience.
I'm working on the floor of the garage trying to get a rusty 9mm bracket loose from my daughters car exhaust - socket on one side, gearwrench on the other - when the stupid gearwrench all the sudden freewheels again. I few choice words were said. I pull it off to see what's up, and instantly recognize that the whole inside drive mechanism as popped out of the wrench. I throw that sucker down and walk back to get a real 9 mm box wrench - steaming with every step.
After finishing the job, and cleaning up, I have to take out the trash and I'm trying to decide whether to drop the gearwrenches into the trash bin, when I decide to look at the wrench and see if it broke or what. When I look at it, I don't think it broke, just came apart. Theres the little "socket" ring, and a tiny little ratchet dog, and a miniscule little coil spring, and then I see this tiny little snap ring, that looks about the diameter of a hair.
I have to go get my magnifying glass and halogen desk lamp to even see how it works. The little spring holds the drive dog into a spline on the outside of the "socket". It drives one direction and ratchets the other. The problem is these parts are tiny - wer'e talking watch spring tiny. It takes me about 30 more minutes of finagling to get the dog and spiring into place then push the dog down while installing the splined socket and then holding it together and wrapping that tiny little snap ring around, without losing it.. Eventually I got it all the way around the socket and it snapped into place. The wrench worked fine after that.
So on two of the half dozen or so times I've used my gearwrenches resulted in 30 minutes or so of repairs to the tools themselves.
I'll give them one more shot, however 3 strikes and they are out of my life.
Does anybody know if other toolmakers make a higher quality version of these tools?
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