Roberts210
Well-known member
I use 'em all the time.
I could never get rid of my SAE tools. I have 2 older tractors, a 1975 Jeep J-10 pick-up, and too many pieces of older equipment.
While watching Wheeler Dealer, a British TV show, I've always wondered where Edd China accesses his SAE hand tools to do a vintage American vehicle, which they do on occasion. I can imagine he would appreciate a really complete set of quality SAE tools, especially something American made.
Motoretro

SAE is all we use to keep the big metal birds in the sky.
As long as I'm still alive and own tools I'll own SAE.
I like that show especially since Edd always tries to explain how things work (even taking the time to take apart non-working parts to show) and how to do the repairs he is making on the cars. I noticed he seems to use Teng tools in the Euro shop (though I recently saw that he was using them in the episode on the Porsche 912e in the California shop). Last season, I saw he was using Craftsman tools in the California shop.
![]()
The other funny thing is how everyone still refers to inch tools as SAE when the actual Society of Automotive Engineers went metric about 20 years ago (research, standards, etc.)
Would you prefer calling them imperial sizes?Funny how Boeing has so many international suppliers but still uses inch tools.
The other funny thing is how everyone still refers to inch tools as SAE when the actual Society of Automotive Engineers went metric about 20 years ago (research, standards, etc.)
Would you prefer calling them imperial sizes?
I would agree with you; I normally refer to them as standard and metric. However this post questioned SAE so all of us have been saying SAE.I have always called them "standard," though the US based SAE did establish the standards. I don't believe that metric fasteners were established by SAE.
I have always called them "standard," though the US based SAE did establish the standards. I don't believe that metric fasteners were established by SAE.
Would you prefer calling them imperial sizes?
No, joke I was helping a customer in the store and he was trying to remove a standard allen bolt with a tripple square. I understand confusing torx, torx plus, and tamper proof torx. But really. They ate nothing alike. Lol.At one stage there were a bunch of archaic threads all done in inch sizing...The main difference being no longer obvious to us today. Back then some standards measured by the thread size and some by the width of the fastener head (similar to say m12 vs 12mm in metric).
Thank god we can not worry about these distinction any longer.
Now we get to squint & guess between hex, torx and tripple square![]()
how everyone still refers to inch tools as SAE when the actual Society of Automotive Engineers went metric about 20 years ago (research, standards, etc.)
Whitworth lol have not heard that in a few years.I've always had older vehicles and machinery, both utilizing SAE. After starting with this, I added Metric as I required them. Toss in some British Whitworth and my tools are a bit eclectic.
Motoretro
I use SAE on a lot of equipment and even automotive tools.
Pullers, ball joint presses, and things like that are typically SAE.
Compressed air fittings are all SAE unless you're using European types.
I would only sell them if you won't be mad at yourself for having to re-purchase them if you need to.
Sae hasn't been used on cheap bicycles in 30+ years, 20 years of fixing them and I've seen more with british standard then I have sae. Right now the clinic I run has a lot of cheap junk and really old bikes lying around, we have two with British sizing and nothing with sae. We also don't have tools for either and will send both bikes off for scrap.For automotive work, SAE are useless now. For me, they only see use in household applications or low budget bicycles.
I don't currently own any old vehicles, my Sae stuff collects dust. I keep noticing guys selling off Sae sets in the classified section. With my rides being an fj cruiser, BMW 330ci, and a Polaris rzr, can I cut the Sae loose and get away with it? Has this bitten anyone in the ***, and they have to go out and buy another set of Sae wrenches?
KBC divides it into fractional, machine screw, number, letter, decimal, dowel pin, and metric, depending on what exactly you're talking about.I like how KBC Tools does it. Fractional and Metric. But convention here is SAE, so that's what I use.