

Millrites are good little machines. Is yours r8 or BS9?New (to me) mill.







Would you believe I have 1 of each? The one pictured has an r8 spindle. The other, which I acquired a few months back, had the B&S spindle and the smaller table. I had already resigned myself to buying new collets and replacing several of my r8 shank tools with straight shank varieties but then I ran upon this machine. In addition to being r8, having the larger table, and a slightly better motor, the table is in amazing shape. Not a single hole drilled in it, whereas the other has quite a bit of damage.Millrites are good little machines. Is yours r8 or BS9?
I used to have one of those SK 3/4 ratchets. I can tell you that the handle will bend before anything else fails, including the anvil. I didn't do it, and obviously this will take a long pipe to accomplish, but...

I used to have one of those SK 3/4 ratchets. I can tell you that the handle will bend before anything else fails, including the anvil. I didn't do it, and obviously this will take a long pipe to accomplish, but...
Use daily. IMO the most versatile and underrated size.Knipex 87 01 180 Cobras
Agree - I have the bigger brothers for both, but that size is definitely the sweet spot.Use daily. IMO the most versatile and underrated size.![]()
Use daily. IMO the most versatile and underrated size.![]()
Agree - I have the bigger brothers for both, but that size is definitely the sweet spot.
72 teeth and I do believe it is new-ish. There is a big brother 1/2” I’ll be buying next. I purchased through Zoro and used a 20% off coupon. Here is the link. J6012FCNice. How many teeth does it have? I've never seen a Proto torque wrench that looks like that, so I assume it's a relatively new release? And yeah, it definitely looks like a Facom.
What's the Proto PN, and where did you purchase it?


The Great Ko-Ken Pumpkin arrived today...
The flex extensions are a #GarageJournal thing, though I guess my entire awareness from Ko-ken comes from here. I was already a ratchet *****, and decided to the the 20% SEMA discount to grab a 3/8" flex ratchet, along with a socket set to match. I didn't realize how low-profile they are:
L-->R Koken, Icon, SK (USA), Tekton
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They're the standard Icon short socket. When I got them I was struck by how few blanks they shared, especially below 14mm (which is why I chose 14mm for the pic above). In this one, Tekton rear, Icon front.Are the Icon sockets something "special", or their standard short sockets? Because those are pretty short when compared to the standard "short" Taiwan socket, like the Tekton.

I only own a 3/8" deep sockets in chrome, and use them rarely (my 1/2" in. impact set has both obv, and they get used).I have the Koken shorties and they're great when they're needed. Some people complain about how the standard Taiwan short sockets, like the Tekton, are too tall, but sometimes that's a good thing. Like you, I have a bunch of lengths from Koken shorties to deep, with several steps in between; but only in metric. I rarely need to actually use a deep socket though.

Yeah - there are very few, if any shared blanks in the Icon set. That's the opposite of a cost-cutting move, and has endeared this set to me when I'm tight on space (which is often with a Mini, a Mazda3 and a Volvo V70, which ain't small, but is very tight). Guessing the Ko-kens will be similar.That is interesting how the Icons shrink in length at smaller sizes. I have the Astro version of the Husky in your pic. Yes, sometimes you need a lot of options on transverse engines, which is why I have all the options possible in metric only.




I'll look and taking a pic. Guessing it's pretty close, which is impressive for a 3/8" vs. a 1/4".^ just out of curiosity how do they line up with the low-end (throw-away cheap) "Power Torque" from O'Reilly's ??
(sorry I forgot to measure them first.)

