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most useless tool

tylerae40

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Joined
Dec 1, 2009
Messages
145
Location
western Australia
FR28SWMP.jpg


LOL, i was given one of these by the missus, and it worked well for doing wing nuts on coffee tables and old chev truck seats but not much else.
Any really cheap tools are ****- was given a "roadside tool kit" for xmas, used it once pulling parts of a wreck- snapped the pliers, bent the cresent- wouldn't open/close, left it in the wreck, it was gone 1/2hr later when i got back with my box.
gmc eletric saw- wouldn't cut throught a door pillar+ snapped the blades+ then couldn't get blades for it = binned
 
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Garys Garage

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Joined
Nov 17, 2008
Messages
419
Location
il
Air powered scraper. Bought it off one of the tool trucks, SO I think. Vibrated like crazy but would change speeds and wasnt any faster than razor blade scraper. Gave it away.
 

Miter Wrench

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Joined
Jan 7, 2009
Messages
2,267
Location
Colorado
My first purchase on ebay was a cheapo paint sprayer. It felt good to throw it away.

Sounds like we'd better keep our 16mm sockets/wrenches...
 

Bobby B.

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Joined
May 5, 2009
Messages
112
Location
Southern California
I don't know what it's official name is, but I received this huge "ratchet" with a red-tipped t-handle at the top. Supposedly it's so you can tighten the socket at a 90-degree angle in a place where you couldn't turn a socket or wrench? But the thing is so F'n big and pointless that I can't see where it could be useful.

It's never left the old toolbox I got as a kid.
 

illmatyk

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Joined
Sep 6, 2009
Messages
778
Location
Yigo, Guam
Husky tire pressure gauge/inflator, thing broke after 2 weeks.

Craftsman 1/2 impact gun, broke after a few months and Kmart didn't wanna honor my warranty even tho it says 1 year on the box......
 
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Aberdale

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Joined
Mar 13, 2009
Messages
1,380
Location
Ohio
+1 on the Craftsman Robogrip pliers. (Should have just called them Robo-rounders.)

Just about all easy-outs. (Less than 50-50 chance of successful extraction.)

Flat ratcheting wrenches that need to be flipped over to reverse. (Heads are too big to get into tight clearances, being flat it's too easy to skin knuckles.)

Dale
 

gkring

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Joined
Oct 15, 2006
Messages
134
Location
Keller, Texas
1/4" drive Clutch head screwdriver socket.
Useless for me. Ive never seen or known anyone else who has seen a clutch head screw.

Holley carbs with metering plates. I swapped and drilled plates so much on my old Mopar 6 pack setup I bought the clutch driver as I was tired of trying to make that small tip screwdriver work.

Mu useless tools are cheap ease outs, spend an hour drilling holes just to have the ease out polish it up for you. they should come with a set of helicoils since that is what you are going to have to use by the time you are done. Since then I have bought a quality set.
 

jerryW

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Joined
Apr 3, 2006
Messages
1,167
Location
Phx AZ
I don't know what it's official name is, but I received this huge "ratchet" with a red-tipped t-handle at the top. Supposedly it's so you can tighten the socket at a 90-degree angle in a place where you couldn't turn a socket or wrench? But the thing is so F'n big and pointless that I can't see where it could be useful.

It's never left the old toolbox I got as a kid.

I used to have one of those when I was younger and dumber. It was called the "Sidewinder". What a piece of ****!


jerry
 

nato

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Dec 23, 2009
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1,342
Location
Northeast Ohio

lilredex

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Apr 29, 2006
Messages
5,948
Location
Toronto
probably a snap on speed wrench. i had just got a shop job when i was 17and the snap on truck came by. i bought the first shiny thing i saw lol.. i think ive used it once or twice in 14 years lol. its a bit rusty now from lack of use

I regularly use one of those (3/8" drive) to drive wood screws (Especially ROBERTSON type) and various nuts (using a deep socket). Years ago while working in an engine rebuild plant, we used them to tighten up pan bolts, timing cover bolts, front mounting plate bolts, etc. They were the cat's meow at that time, today they would have used something else I guess.
 

lilredex

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Apr 29, 2006
Messages
5,948
Location
Toronto
Just about all easy-outs. (Less than 50-50 chance of successful extraction.)

Flat ratcheting wrenches that need to be flipped over to reverse. (Heads are too big to get into tight clearances, being flat it's too easy to skin knuckles.)

Dale

Get some LH drill bits to use once you have a pilot hole drilled, most times the broken bolt turns right out. Using easy outs sucessfully takes practice, something like using handtaps. With a bit of experience you get to anticipate when it is time to quit (before it breaks off).

I got a $2 flat ratcheting 9/16" wrench out of Princess Auto's junk box that gets regular use on my exhaust systems. Fits in most places that a socket/ratchet setup won't. Best $2 investment ever!!
 

lilredex

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Joined
Apr 29, 2006
Messages
5,948
Location
Toronto
I would have to say one of those automated center punches that you press down on, took more effort on my part to put my hole body weight into pressing it then just getting a hammer.

Back off the spring tension a bit, they're only designed for layout work to define the point easier. Come back in with a regular punch and hammer if that spot will be drilled. I prefer mine as it allows me to get the hole located more accurately.......no longer have the vision of a seven year old!!
 

lilredex

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Apr 29, 2006
Messages
5,948
Location
Toronto
This was the style i had, It was really hard to press.
29430.jpg


Any one mind shareing what brands they have that work well for them?
Also sorry about the thread hijacking.

Looks just like the one I use, and is adjustable. Mine came from BusyBee Tools and is likely the same one.
 

lilredex

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Apr 29, 2006
Messages
5,948
Location
Toronto
I love the dremel. I've used it with one of those fiber backed cut off wheels to cleanly and precisely cut out sheetmetal on my cars in areas where a larger cutoff wheel wont fit.

Also good for cutting off the heads of bolts (in awkward places) that hardly have a head left on them (rusted round).
 

matthew

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Joined
Dec 4, 2009
Messages
1,342
The worst ones I’ve experienced:

A pair of old wire strippers my grandmother cleaned out of a drawer at her house. Don’t know where they came from since gramps always bought good tools, or perhaps it’s just that the design of these have improved over the years. Anyways, I never used them because I had a better pair, but I don’t like throwing away tools. So after years of being in my truck and then the bottom of my toolbox, I tried them – horrible. The cutters wouldn’t cut through 18ga stranded copper, and if you tried stripping the insulation the wire just wanted to jam between the two halves of the tool. Imagine like cheap scissors. Might not help that I’m left handed, but this is one of the few occasions I have garbaged a tool.

I was given a bit-type screwdriver set when I was about 13 or 14. I think it was a bonus item my Dad had picked up for free, and gave to me. The kit had two separate screwdrivers in it, oddly enough one was a ratcheting screwdriver with hex bits, and one was a fixed type with collet bits. The one with the collet-type bits is actually decent, but the ratcheting driver is horrible. It has several problems:
1) Just 10 teeth in the ratcheting mechanism is nowhere near enough for any tool, but especially not for a screwdriver.
2) The ratchet mechanism is below the handle, not built into it. So with a hollow handle, the balance feels wrong, even if the handle is filled with bits.
3) The switch for forward/locked/reverse tends to shift on its own.
4) The cover on the end of the ratcheting section tends to unscrew itself.
5) There is a flex joint between the ratchet mechanism and the handle, the idea being that you could use it as a regular screwdriver, or turn the handle by 45 or 90 degrees so it’s more like a pistol-grip screwdriver. Apart from the shape of the handle being wrong for this, the lock to keep it at 0 / 45 / 90 degrees tended to loosen itself off.

I kept the bits and sockets that went with it, but use them on a different screwdriver handle.


My sister-in-law had an experience that probably tops them all. She was helping someone build a fence, and they had bought some extra claw hammers. So they went out, and started pounding, and on the first nail the head of the hammer broke off. Then they tried the next hammer, and broke the claw on it immediately. The guy had bought stuff from a dollar store, and claimed “it was a perfectly good hammer.” Yeah, right. My sister-in-law was not at all amused. She’s not a tool person, but does know you get what you pay for.
 
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Ser50

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Mar 23, 2010
Messages
117
Location
Vancity
a master slim-jim kit.

i mean, its not useless. its really nice, but for 100 bucks, ive used it ONCE.
 

Ser50

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Mar 23, 2010
Messages
117
Location
Vancity
16mm and other strange sizes are common on metric engine cap screws (detroit/cummins) where the head size is'nt dependent on the bolt shank as found in imperial.
 

selohssa

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Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
861
Location
Edmonton Alberta Canada
I bought a battery operated Dremel. The battery would not hold a charge long enough to cut off a sprinkler escutcheon. It did have a nice bag though.

I love my battery operated dremel for windshield chip repairs.

As for useless tools, a lot of blue point tools ****. Their locking pliers and Snap On spray guns are coated with paint. The first time that you get solvent on them, they look like ***.

The Blue Point auto center punch is a pile-o-****, I thought that I just got a bad one and bought another. Both ****.

The best auto center punch that I have used is the Starret one by a long shot.
 

Az Scooter

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Joined
Dec 30, 2009
Messages
1,500
This little beauty my wife bought me.
 

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y20dth

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Joined
Feb 20, 2010
Messages
698
Location
Antwerp, Belgium
This caliper, 7 feet long!!!...although it was the most useless (because it needed three people to use it...LOL) it was also the coolest!!! I also got the Granite surface plate it is sitting on.

caliper2868086sa8.jpg

I think this should be in the WTF-thread ! :lol_hitti

WTF do you use that for ?? Enlighten me !
 

pedro1990

Member
Joined
Mar 9, 2010
Messages
21
1. prazi putter remover for electric drill-impossible, period.
2. snap ring pliers from ace hardware-tips spring around when used
 

crewchief888

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Joined
Dec 3, 2009
Messages
13,736
Location
NW indiana
hmmm
i cant really think of anything that i bought thats useless.. :headscrat

just about everything i have i bought for a reason, some were only used 1 or 2 times.

the wife dont buy me much, she usally asks what i want/need, and tells me to go get it.
she did buy me a skull welding hood about 10 years ago, and was surprised last summer when i was still using it. "I'm surprised you didnt throw that away" i go through a LOT of pocket size LED flashlights, after they get dropped in oil or fuel they usally dont work, she keeps me supplied with them :)

:beer:
 

thump186

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Joined
Aug 23, 2005
Messages
70
Location
maine
18 volt cordless Ryobi reciprocating saw. hold charge bout 5 minutes. Also the cheap cordless drills my farther in law finds at yard sales and every where.
 
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