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Name a tool you hate

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4x4gearhead

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 4, 2010
Messages
1,820
Location
New Hampshire
I hate suction guns! I have never found one that doesnt spew gear oil into my face as I try to **** the fluid out of my Dana 50 TTB on my f-250. **** THOSE THINGS! By the way gear oil tastes worse than it smells.
 

rocklobster

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 1, 2011
Messages
184
Multi bit screw drivers! I know they can be handy but they are always not well designed and I always seem to drop bits. I just like a real driver in hand not some loud heavy awkward piece of piss.
 

porphyre

Banned
Joined
Sep 2, 2009
Messages
1,321
Hex Wrenches. Lets design a fastener tightening tool with 35 standard sizes and 35 metric sizes, which don't have any practical way to keep them together, where the 'fast' drive method is still slow and the 'slow' drive method takes a ridiculously large/clear area to swing the wrench, where the torque required to remove a fastener is more than the base material can handle without snapping. On the other hand, the hex wrench brings us the single coolest-looking fastener in the entire world--the socket head cap screw.

Funny you should mention that. I just got a used drill press and the damn thing was riddled with those pieces of ****. I understand the purpose of them and how they can be useful, but seriously... one of the things required like a 1/2" hex key! It was a 1/2"/13 bolt. WTF am I supposed to do with a 1/2" hex key? I didn't even have one, so that bolt got removed w/ an 8" pipe wrench. That *****, along with about 7 other socket cap screws were replaced with standard hex bolts immediately.
 

Davefr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 7, 2010
Messages
11,820
Location
OR
#2 Philips screwdriver and the fasteners they were meant for.
 

Mr.Magoo

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 16, 2012
Messages
79
Location
Out by Bakersfield
I'm with Suss427, if I ever get near a Crafstman ratchet my radar goes off and I have to go to my therapist and take a seat on the couch. Too bad the damn things won't self destruct. Please bury deep in the ground any you may have, it would not be fair to the Chinese to make another piece of S*#! tool out of something so poor!
 

woody 73

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 14, 2009
Messages
11,542
Location
The Great State Up North
Cheap drill bits enough said.

Strap type oil filter wrenches (they might work for most people; but I always get the oil filter can to crush) trust me not fun!

Cheap screwdrivers that break the moment you apply any pressure.

Those dog bone wrenches what a way to **** your wallet dry!
 

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
A paintbrush or paint roller. I don't mind painting something as long as I can spray it. Thank god my girlfriend likes to paint, she is now the designated painter. I'm good at it, I just don't have the patience.

Another is the post-hole digger. Seriously?! A powered auger is worth the money spent to rent. When I put in my fence last year we did 36 24" deep holes in 2.5 hours with a 2-man auger. It would have taken easily 4x that long with a post hole digger.
 

Jawn

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 29, 2011
Messages
3,594
Location
Stuck in traffic, GA
Another is the post-hole digger. Seriously?! A powered auger is worth the money spent to rent. When I put in my fence last year we did 36 24" deep holes in 2.5 hours with a 2-man auger. It would have taken easily 4x that long with a post hole digger.

True... but if you're just digging one mailbox post hole, I suspect a post hole digger (and a shovel to go with it) isn't such a bad option. That said, I've helped dig fence post holes with one so I know what a backbreaker it is.
 

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
True... but if you're just digging one mailbox post hole, I suspect a post hole digger (and a shovel to go with it) isn't such a bad option. That said, I've helped dig fence post holes with one so I know what a backbreaker it is.

Good point. Nice to see a local btw :thumbup: I'm just right up the road from you.
 

cderalow

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 13, 2011
Messages
1,326
Location
Potomac, MD
one of the first times I met my FIL my wife (then girlfriend) enlisted my help to put in a fence around their back yard. my FIL had a posthole digger and two shovels, and when my wife and I showed up at 10am, he had been going at it for three hours and dug one hole. I promptly called the local rental place and got a 2 man auger and had the remaining 40 holes dug by dinner, and returned the thing back to the rental place.

after seeing one used to dig deck footers, I vowed to never use a damn posthole digger.

such an inefficient tool.
 

rlb1953

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 4, 2007
Messages
121
Location
Yorkton SK
one of the first times I met my FIL my wife (then girlfriend) enlisted my help to put in a fence around their back yard. my FIL had a posthole digger and two shovels, and when my wife and I showed up at 10am, he had been going at it for three hours and dug one hole. I promptly called the local rental place and got a 2 man auger and had the remaining 40 holes dug by dinner, and returned the thing back to the rental place.

after seeing one used to dig deck footers, I vowed to never use a damn posthole digger.

such an inefficient tool.

It must depend on your soil. A couple years ago, my dad, after he was done his work for the day, would drive out and put in 2 or 3 posts. Before harvest he had finish a mile of barb-wire fence. Mind you, he is the only 67 year old I know with washboard abs.
 
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skeletonizer

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 25, 2008
Messages
1,320
Location
Michigan
snowshovel.jpg


I will never forgive my ancestors for settling in Northern Michigan and I will never understand why I don't move away from here. :headscrat
 

archirelic

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 24, 2010
Messages
2,263
Location
texas
Another vote for drywall saws. Too many times while working in construction/remodeling I had to come behind drywallers and clean up the complete mess they've made of everything while using these saws.

Anytime I've had to do drywall work, I've always attached a fine-tooth blade on a variable speed reciprocating saw and have been able to achieve a much higher level of cut & finish than these "pro's" with their antiquated drywall saws.

Grrrrr...
 

-Brent-

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 23, 2009
Messages
4,709
Location
Utah
I'll second the cheapie wire crimper/stripper.

As well, I'll add steel pipe wrenches. Compared to my aluminum Rigids, the old heavy steel ones I've owned forever have been relegated to holding the box down.

Gimmicky axe/prybar/wire twist/bottle opener/nail puller/entrenching multi tool. They've got their place in a road box BUT If I see someone with one of those in his toolbelt, I immediately pass judgement on his ability as a craftsman. Sounds bad but I've never seen someone use one that didn't mess up everything around it...
 

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
It must depend on your soil. A couple years ago, my dad, after he was done his work for the day, would drive out and put in 2 or 3 posts. Before harvest he had finish a mile of barb-wire fence. Mind you, he is the only 67 year old I know with washboard abs.

GA red clay practically turns into concrete if it hasn't rained in a few days. Add the marble rocks in the soil where I live (I live near Tate, GA, the marble capital of the south) Fortunately we put my fence up in March and the soil wasn't that dry and a lot easier to dig. We ended up having to rent a jackhammer to carve holes into the marble boulders we encountered underground in order to set two of my fence posts.
 

cderalow

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 13, 2011
Messages
1,326
Location
Potomac, MD
It must depend on your soil. A couple years ago, my dad, after he was done his work for the day, would drive out and put in 2 or 3 posts. Before harvest he had finish a mile of barb-wire fence. Mind you, he is the only 67 year old I know with washboard abs.

we live in a region with 'Class C' or **** soil, but somehow my FIL's house happens to sit on one of the few areas with 'Class A', which is full of rocks and misc. debris.

Makes for terrible hole digging.
 

Jawn

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 29, 2011
Messages
3,594
Location
Stuck in traffic, GA
Slotted or standard screwdrivers!

I'll second that. I'm not real fond of Phillips head either, but it's a damn sight better than flat blade.

As to the circular saw... depends on the saw. I recently picked up a used US-made Skil from a local pawn shop for $20. That thing torques itself around when I start it up so I have to re-align it to my pencil marks once it's spinning. My 3 3/8" Makita cordless however... I can follow a line reeal good with that thing.
 

kippieland

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 22, 2011
Messages
1,123
Location
Western Washington
I'm with the guy that doesn't like adjustable wrench (cresent wrenchies.) I get they have their place and use but they frustrate the F*#K out of me! They never seem to stay in the position set them in. I spend half of my time trying to get the damn thing to fit the nut instead of getting it off. It doesn't help the only time I seem to use them is doing plumbing.....which I hate as well.
 

metaldad

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 2, 2011
Messages
7,746
Location
nw indiana
Any power tool with a battery. Every time I pick up a cordless it's practically dead.........and those damn lith ion, dont give you any warning that the battery will die as soon as you get into an uncomfortable position. + I have (2) 5 gallon buckets full of dead batteries (might as well throw out the tool because of the cost of replacement batteries - if they're available)
 

Kirbot

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 25, 2010
Messages
11,001
Location
New Jersey
Torx bits

They're better than Phillips, but I've come to hate them with a passion after working on a Jeep covered with them.
They're always rusted out and stuck, and end up stripping out....
 

vga

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
302
I would have to hop on the screw extractor choice. As stated by anther post if Im holding it and a drill in my hands then there has been a screw up and as we all know everthing comes to a halt until the broken screw/ bolt has been removed. Arrrgh!!!!!
 

kxxr

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 25, 2011
Messages
504
Location
Big Sky Country
The railroad tool, known as the Clawbar. Not a tool every one gets to use but if you have ever had to ... it is the tool you hate the most. If you haven't had the pleasure, you are blessed. It is a giant bar with a foot shape on the business end designed to remove spikes from ties. Pure misery.
 

purplezr2

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2010
Messages
5,292
Location
Central MN
The impact driver that you smack with a hammer to break screws loose (Like on Honda rotors). The 1/4" shanks always break. They need to be 3/8". Anytime I run into those rotors, I just grab the air hammer and chisel bit and just skip the headache.

Have never seen any that are not 3/8 I have two, one is a Napa, not sure of the other one, both are 3/8 drive.

L shaped allen keys, what a pain, and so slow.
 

Tunger

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2012
Messages
259
Triple square, double hex, torx plus, or any other driver you have to buy to get an oddball job done, like vw axle shafts. Whatever money you would have made goes to pay for a tool that you will likely never use again and thus not recoup you expenditure on. I hate buying tools that have little to no chance of actually making me money, which is why I still work out of my 30+ year old tool box.
 
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