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Recommend me a thread chaser set

stickshift

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For DIY automotive use on Japanese cars (Toyota and Honda). Mostly interested in the 'die'/external thread chasers, but a set that has both external and internal thread chasers is fine.
 
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lis2323

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Snap-on is nice.

d916baed8166711afe75f304e44a6156.jpg
 

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CR888

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I've seen sets like the Snap On set (made presumably by LANG) and others by S.P tools as well as more generic brands that look identicle to the LANG set. Price difference is huge but I wonder if the generic EBay jobs are copies or the real deal. Lang looks like a good set without the gouging price premium.
 

6PTsocket

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For DIY automotive use on Japanese cars (Toyota and Honda). Mostly interested in the 'die'/external thread chasers, but a set that has both external and internal thread chasers is fine.
There is only one company that makes almost all of them. They have a number of sets both large and small, metric or SAE. It is Lang, formerly Kastar. Whether you buy Snap On, Craftsman or some other brand that says " Made in USA" you are buying Lang. Find the set that covers your needs and then shop for price, regardless of brand. This is not some new revelation; it has come up here many times and is pretty common knowledge.

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stickshift

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Tallpilot

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Thanks all, for pointing me in the right direction. Looks like the 15pc set linked to earlier is the largest metric-only set Lang makes:
http://www.langtools.com/rethreader-tools/?sort=featured&page=1

Set details: http://www.langtools.com/sku-2584-15-pc-metric-thread-restorer-set/

Funny now that I've got real tool drawers, I'm checking out the packaging of multi-piece tools. They should sell that set in a more compact package - I'm running out of space! :lol_hitti

I also started with that metric only set but ended up with the big set. The problem is it is missing a couple sizes. Next you will want the axle nut rethreader set.

https://www.tooldiscounter.com/Item...MImuG3lqzc3AIVhISzCh04xwKTEAQYASABEgJhVfD_BwE

https://www.tooldiscounter.com/Item...MIjMbPja3c3AIVg4nICh2lVgg6EAQYASABEgI9K_D_BwE
 
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Spiffers

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I'd love it if it were half the pieces and half the price. I hate to pay for SAE stuff I have no use for.

Comments like this always remind of that line from Doc Hollywood when they bring his boxer car to the shop and the black mechanic says "I always did want an excuse to get me a set of metric tools".
 

Tallpilot

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Comments like this always remind of that line from Doc Hollywood when they bring his boxer car to the shop and the black mechanic says "I always did want an excuse to get me a set of metric tools".

I think many of us felt this way when we started. Over time you learn the lesson that buying the master set ends up being cheaper in the long run because the smaller sets always exclude some size you end up needing.

My metric stuff gets far more use than my SAE but there are occasions when I’m glad to have it.
 

Mr Ratchet

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I think many of us felt this way when we started. Over time you learn the lesson that buying the master set ends up being cheaper in the long run because the smaller sets always exclude some size you end up needing.

I agree and I now have a 53 piece set after owning a much smaller set. As A DIY'er you never know what you may run across. I use more SAE than Metric currently but, equally prepared for both.
 

lis2323

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I bought these SAE die nut thread chasers off the S-on truck when I was a teen over 50 years ago.

8ce98210d43f9e7b80fbfa4e81acff8b.jpg

The (well used) copper colored set on the right is National Coarse.
 

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6PTsocket

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That's why I mentioned it. ;)
As far as I know Snap On/Bluepoint is the only place that carries open stock, where you can buy individual pieces to fill in or replace.

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6PTsocket

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For a cheap and dirty chaser tap, take a hard bolt ( grade 8 or metric class 10.9) and cut a few flutes with a Dremel or cutoff wheel.

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