I have the Gearwrench 9602 set. I don't use it constantly, but when I need it, it sure helps. Really happy with them. Sadly, they don't make stubby reversibles, so some day I'll probably give in and get the Snap-On BOERMS712 set. Anybody have one used, and interested in selling?
I am pretty conscientious about not breaking seriously tight fasteners loose with the ratcheting box ends, or leaning on them too hard to tighten anything. I pull out a fixed box end and a ratcheting box end for one fastener, if necessary. It's not that the Gearwrenches feel like they have any play in the mechanisms, or that they feel delicate, or that I have any other reason to suspect that they would break...but I just feel like it might be misusing the tool. I don't know why, because I have no problem hanging off of a regular socket ratchet if necessary, and they can't possibly be that much stronger, can they?
I really don't like the flex heads, but I do have a Blackhawk 15mm stubby flex head ratcheting box that I bought in a panic from the MAC guy when I realized, half way through replacing an XK 5.0L A/C compressor for the first time, that there is no way to get the compressor out without taking the top nut off of the driver's side motor mount, and that unlike the 4.2L, that top nut is now basically impossible to get a tool onto. My short flex head 3/8" ratchet can break it loose, but more than a turn or two and it's impossible to get off the nut without running into the exhaust manifold heat shield (and it hits long before I can ratchet the nut all the way off), so I have to break it free, squeeze it out, then get the Blackhawk on, which can spin it the rest of the way off but can't get enough leverage to break it free in the first place. I swear these cars were designed by morons...or sadists.
I am sure it's a conspiracy between the European car manufacturers and the tool producers.
When I was a BMW tech, I was grumbling one day about the perverse variety of bizarre tools required to work on these Ultimate Driving Machines...until the guy next to me finally explained the problem. He said, "You don't understand...BMW is a specialty tool manufacturer that builds cars to create demand for its primary product line."
