Anyone try one of these yet? I bought a pair on Friday, the mac guy said he sold 40 of them in a week. I guess they grab the joint & keep it from spinning. 9 Circle 9cl-89101 They were about $25.
Not sure how effective this plier can be for those of us living in the rust belt. I replaced a few sway bar links on my car. They are the type with hex hole in the middle, never once could I hold the middle post to prevent it from spinning with a vise grip. In order for this tool to be effective, it has to be able to cut deep dents into the metal. Not very likely based on the size.
I found that the most effective way is thoroughly cleaning up the rust on the threads and the hex hole. It works every time.
Anyone try one of these yet? I bought a pair on Friday, the mac guy said he sold 40 of them in a week. I guess they grab the joint & keep it from spinning. 9 Circle 9cl-89101 They were about $25.
I just replaced both sway bars on my firebird. Three of the four endlink studs sheared. One sheared while using an impact on it. The other two sheared under hand tool power.
The endlinks have a bolt head on one end and a nut on the other. Awkward as hell to reach but not horrible. Is this not that common?
I just replaced both sway bars on my firebird. Three of the four endlink studs sheared. One sheared while using an impact on it. The other two sheared under hand tool power.
The endlinks have a bolt head on one end and a nut on the other. Awkward as hell to reach but not horrible. Is this not that common?
What year is the firebird? 67-92 use the ones like in picture two. The pliers are for the first type.
You guys that aren't pro techs don't realize we disconnect sway bar links for many many other reasons than for replacing them. FWD axle seal replacement, CV axle service, removing front suspension cradles for engine and trans work and many more jobs that simply require disconnection and reuse. If I torched off every part that was challenging to remove I'd burn the whole damn car down. Sometimes speed and finesse win the day. I have the Snap On version and I can have the sway bar link removed before you get the torch rolled over and lit.
The thin (less than 1/4") jaws fit inbetween the link bracket on the strut and the delicate rubber boot on the link and hold the stud from spinning while you buzz the links nut off with an impact. Super easy and no destruction required. You could even grind down a regular pair of vise grips if your thrifty.
I'll buy that.
Viable tool now that thinner jaws were mentioned.
And I can see the parrot nose being viable now that I see in use on a cramped vehicle.
Could easily become the goto tool for this.
My original assessment was made on my own, now known to be very limited, sway link experiences.
Now a that's left is buying them for 50 to 80 percent less from NOT the Mac dealer.
I've got the TOPTUL version up on EBay for $19.50 plus $7.00 shipping. Little did I realize that the proper name for these were Parrot Nose Pliers.