To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Show your new tool arrivals

To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

AmishFury

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 22, 2015
Messages
872
Thanks. They are Mac, actually. I'm not sure, but to be brutally honest with you: I would look elsewhere. Some background: The friend in question works at the same shop I used to and several guys had them including the owner and my friend. They are decent pliers, but the quality leaves a lot to be desired compared to most truck brand offerings. They are Chinese made, I believe. They sure as heck aren't USA. Anyway, the big problem are that they aren't very precise, the fit and finish is fairly poor, and they develop excessive play after a while. But, the biggest problem is that the manufacturing tolerances are all over the place. Better off buying Channellock, except they don't make the real long ones, unfortunately. If all you work on is cars it's not so bad. The set also comes with a long nose straight plier and a long diagonal cutter, and the small hose
plier but he knows I'm good on that front, so he left them out. The duckbills are pretty good I now have two sets of those. The set was about $100 on special, so it's not bad if you don't have many pliers yet. But I would rather spend my coin on individual pieces of higher quality, since there's a fair amount of redundancy in this set. Not meaning to sound negative, Knipex has spoiled me.

Sent via homing pigeon using methamphetamines

looks like they simply changed the infamous "bag of pliers" specials to red handles instead of black

anyway this is what i got the last couple days

found some USA filter wrenches at kmart... looks like they've been sitting on those hooks for some time
123015_zpslyfictiu.jpg


and picked this up to fill a gap in a set
123115a_zpsfpydyof5.jpg
 

pepi

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2013
Messages
2,883
Location
Woodstock, GA
Needed some machine tools, so I got some.

attachment.php


USA made

attachment.php


attachment.php



attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • 20151229_191814_resized.jpg
    20151229_191814_resized.jpg
    103.3 KB · Views: 879
  • 20151229_191924_resized.jpg
    20151229_191924_resized.jpg
    145.4 KB · Views: 880
  • DSC_0144.jpg
    DSC_0144.jpg
    122.8 KB · Views: 882
  • DSC_0149.jpg
    DSC_0149.jpg
    88.2 KB · Views: 873

steed andersen

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 10, 2014
Messages
217
Location
Edmore.Mi
Those pliers look very nice! I wonder who makes these for Mac? And are they made in USA?
I have a lot of these pliers. From what I can tell they are Sunex rebranded for Mac. They are pretty darn good pliers for the money. I bought one set of 15 for $149.00 and they often have 10 pc sets on sale for $99.00. They are not Knipex but out of 21 pliers of this brand I have only had to warranty one pair and that was me being picky.:D
 

WhiffySpark

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 22, 2009
Messages
6,252
I have a lot of these pliers. From what I can tell they are Sunex rebranded for Mac. They are pretty darn good pliers for the money. I bought one set of 15 for $149.00 and they often have 10 pc sets on sale for $99.00. They are not Knipex but out of 21 pliers of this brand I have only had to warranty one pair and that was me being picky.:D

I have the biggest set as well. Came with 4 free crescent wrenches. As far as I can tell they're the same as the cornwell set I brought 5 years ago
 

dede2897234

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 1, 2008
Messages
1,716
Location
Northern, Ohio
Picked up these two for $120. Blackhawk interchangeable set and Gearwrench 68 piece set which has the 84 tooth ratchets. The Blackhawk set is really cool.

Bobcat753,

I like your Blackhawk set. It is similar to the Stanley locking flex ratchet system sold on Amazon here: LINK. However, it doesn't come with the case, the 1/4" drive ratchet head, and the all those ratcheting box ends. I own the Stanley version and it is useful.


Dave
 

rrich1

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 7, 2015
Messages
793
Picked up a few things between Menard's, HD, and Amazon.



Sent from my XT1254 using Tapatalk
 

ricleh

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 2, 2007
Messages
1,447
Location
Sacramento, CA
ricleh,

Can you please specify the manufacturers of the split die sets and the screwdrivers?


Thanks,

Dave

The screwdrivers are from England and say Siegen on them. I know nothing of this brand. I have been looking for an extra long PH3 screwdriver for a long time and this is the first one I have come across. The split dies are made by a guy in Ohio named John Emerson. This is the website.
 

Bobcat753

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 24, 2014
Messages
1,487
Location
New Hampshire
Bobcat753,

I like your Blackhawk set. It is similar to the Stanley locking flex ratchet system sold on Amazon here: LINK. However, it doesn't come with the case, the 1/4" drive ratchet head, and the all those ratcheting box ends. I own the Stanley version and it is useful.


Dave

It's similar because Stanley owns Proto/Blackhawk! This set is really cool and well made. I think it was around $300 new. Hopefuly I'll be able to find some good uses for it soon.
 

anndel

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 28, 2015
Messages
3,270
Location
Hawaii, USA
Got these this past Monday:

Knipex flush diagonal cutters
Knipex plier wrench 3 pc set
SK Snap Ring Pliers
Snap On 1/4" drive flex head comfort grip ratchet
 

Attachments

  • 20160101_113426.jpg
    20160101_113426.jpg
    9.9 KB · Views: 224

MattVette89

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 27, 2014
Messages
2,265
Location
SW Chicago
I have a lot of these pliers. From what I can tell they are Sunex rebranded for Mac. They are pretty darn good pliers for the money. I bought one set of 15 for $149.00 and they often have 10 pc sets on sale for $99.00. They are not Knipex but out of 21 pliers of this brand I have only had to warranty one pair and that was me being picky.:D

I have the MAC versions as well that are a few years old. Not USA quality, but leaps and bounds above the HF version of long pliers I replaced. My favorite and probably most often used for small tasks are a set of mini 45* (or 60? can't remember) needle nose.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

davethorik

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 14, 2013
Messages
4,992
Location
Norka, Ohio
These were waiting in the mail for me today :-D

SK 45875 Tuff 1 ratchet, 3/8 bent handle flex head. Discontinued but showed up on Amazon.

Second, Klein D2000-7CST Ironworker's pliers. My 1st pair of Klein pliers, I am impressed so far.
 

Attachments

  • 20160101_203547.jpg
    20160101_203547.jpg
    153.6 KB · Views: 154
  • 20160101_205200.jpg
    20160101_205200.jpg
    153.8 KB · Views: 168

T_Roze

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 5, 2013
Messages
481
Location
Edmonton Alberta
Thanks. They are Mac, actually. I'm not sure, but to be brutally honest with you: I would look elsewhere. Some background: The friend in question works at the same shop I used to and several guys had them including the owner and my friend. They are decent pliers, but the quality leaves a lot to be desired compared to most truck brand offerings. They are Chinese made, I believe. They sure as heck aren't USA. Anyway, the big problem are that they aren't very precise, the fit and finish is fairly poor, and they develop excessive play after a while. But, the biggest problem is that the manufacturing tolerances are all over the place. Better off buying Channellock, except they don't make the real long ones, unfortunately. If all you work on is cars it's not so bad. The set also comes with a long nose straight plier and a long diagonal cutter, and the small hose
plier but he knows I'm good on that front, so he left them out. The duckbills are pretty good I now have two sets of those. The set was about $100 on special, so it's not bad if you don't have many pliers yet. But I would rather spend my coin on individual pieces of higher quality, since there's a fair amount of redundancy in this set. Not meaning to sound negative, Knipex has spoiled me.

Sent via homing pigeon using methamphetamines


I picked up this set as well. Half for work and half to have for home. I agree with the quality aspect, they seam midline at best. But for ten bucks a plier, it's not bad. I did find the 3 hose pliers to have a smoother action than my comparable bluepoint set of three that I had bought the week prior. That may be due to not being used at all yet though. The bluepoint pliers (apparently snap on doesn't make hose pliers, according to my driver) are about 30-40% heavier built in the handles. Makes them a lot heftier to hold.

I do like the small set of 4. Those little side cutters work awesome while doing light welding with the mig.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

emusa91

New member
Joined
Aug 9, 2014
Messages
3
Picked up these Knipex pliers, Metric Gearwrench Midlength sockets in 1/4 and 3/8 drive and some Gearwrench and Armstrong extensions from Sears.com using shopyourway points today. Gotta love free tools!

<a href="http://s1027.photobucket.com/user/eelliot6/media/178A9AEC-C0BB-4C2B-A033-11424FB348A0_zpsymindgj6.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1027.photobucket.com/albums/y338/eelliot6/178A9AEC-C0BB-4C2B-A033-11424FB348A0_zpsymindgj6.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo 178A9AEC-C0BB-4C2B-A033-11424FB348A0_zpsymindgj6.jpg"/></a>
 
Last edited:

Finky198

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 25, 2014
Messages
2,120
Location
North East
Nice looking Split-Dies. I checked the website they seem kind of expensive is there a reason why you went with his versus other brands that are less expensive
 

monkeyspanners

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2013
Messages
419
Location
Oxford, UK
The screwdrivers are from England and say Siegen on them. I know nothing of this brand. I have been looking for an extra long PH3 screwdriver for a long time and this is the first one I have come across. The split dies are made by a guy in Ohio named John Emerson. This is the website.


I think Siegen is Sealey's budget brand.
 

ricleh

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 2, 2007
Messages
1,447
Location
Sacramento, CA
Nice looking Split-Dies. I checked the website they seem kind of expensive is there a reason why you went with his versus other brands that are less expensive

I ordered one set to check them out and was impressed with the quality. Also I don't know of any others that have this range of sizes. I was not impressed with the Murray dies and I don't know of any other manufacturers of split dies.
 

ricleh

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 2, 2007
Messages
1,447
Location
Sacramento, CA
What is the purpose of the split die set?

I use them in situations where the end of the stud or bolt is messed up. The standard rethreading die will not align with the threads properly because of the damage. It is possible with a split die to put the die behind the damage and back the die off the stud or bolt and repair the damaged threads at the end. There may be other cases for using split dies, but that is why I get them.
 

Chadwilliam1

Well-known member
Joined
May 13, 2012
Messages
2,788
Location
Cincinnati
They can be handy if you need to slowly cut the threads. Do very little at a time then go back over it after tightening the die.

Sent from my HTC M9
 

m_hatcher

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 22, 2012
Messages
473
$2.12 after $6 surprise points and the 20% off code floating around. And made in USA. ImageUploadedByTapatalk1451761601.430959.jpg

Also picked up this for $45 and some change after 10% off coupon. Was tagged as open box but after opening it up, everything was still packaged from factory. Will be perfect for siding, cars and motorcycles.ImageUploadedByTapatalk1451761754.190038.jpg
 

firworks

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 29, 2015
Messages
4,079
Location
IL
I got a full set of metric deepwell Toptul sockets from dnschmidt to go with the short set I already had. I really like these Toptul sockets. Super nice to use and the fit and finish on them is top notch. Also for those of you who are really into it, they're all 6 point!

hG9YktE.jpg


And this behemoth. Not sure what I will do with it but my original plan was to use it as a driver on my arbor press. Sure is cool though... and heavy!

OGXbP8Y.jpg


Edit: I forgot I also got some wrench racks. I'm not totally sure yet but I think it's better this way. I don't think I got as much room back in each drawer as I was expecting but it's nice having a place for them to go back when you're done using them.

Before:
Qi74iHA.jpg

XWaouqk.jpg

After:
6MoWz6S.jpg

ChzbiGA.jpg
 
Last edited:

02Xterra

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 1, 2015
Messages
524
Location
Lynchburg, Va
Ordered online to get 20% off, picked up the wrenches from the Advance Auto down the road to fill in some spaces. Then to Northern Tool for the Ernst wrench racks and a tamper-proof torx set to go in my vehicle with the other Bondhus fold up tools
 

Attachments

  • 20160102_134513.jpg
    20160102_134513.jpg
    144.7 KB · Views: 180
  • 20160102_134642.jpg
    20160102_134642.jpg
    142.6 KB · Views: 183
  • 20160102_144045.jpg
    20160102_144045.jpg
    156.9 KB · Views: 192

Toofast28

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2014
Messages
207
Wera Kraftform plus 900 series chisel tip screwdriver set. Ordered from Amazon with Christmas money. ImageUploadedByTapatalk1451779723.971742.jpgImageUploadedByTapatalk1451779736.507928.jpgImageUploadedByTapatalk1451779748.207425.jpg
 

Jarhead0408

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 1, 2012
Messages
5,734
Location
Who knows?
I use them in situations where the end of the stud or bolt is messed up. The standard rethreading die will not align with the threads properly because of the damage. It is possible with a split die to put the die behind the damage and back the die off the stud or bolt and repair the damaged threads at the end. There may be other cases for using split dies, but that is why I get them.

Thanks for the explanation. I learn something new here everyday. :thumbup:
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom