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The Facom Tools Thread.

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YesIHaveAHammer

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Jun 1, 2025
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New OGV Grip hex and Torx released:

NSH.GRP.J8 8 Piece OGV Grip Hexagon Bit Socket Set 6-17mm 1/2" drive

EH.GRP.J9 9 Piece OGV Grip Hexagon Screwdriver Bit Set 2-8mm
EXR.GRP.J8 8 Piece OGV Grip Tamperproof Torx Screwdriver Bit Set T10-T40
There's more.

They do say they're fine for undamaged heads too. But if buying only for use on damaged stuff, I think I'd stick to the bits and bit sockets.

L keys with ball long end 83HGRP.JP9PB
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P handles hex 84HGRP.J6
P handles Torx 89X.GRP.J6
1778880207542.png
 

oled

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Dec 13, 2025
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Location
Denmark
This is my "four post lift". They extend to 0,5 meters.
I bought two second hand ones, liked them, and ordered two new ones. The feet are changed on the newest ones, with the triangle shape. Shortly after they were discontinued, replaced by some really crappy looking ones.

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JeeperAz

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Jun 23, 2005
Messages
80
Location
SoCal
Does anyone know how to contact Facom support for warranty purposes? Their website has no option for USA customers. I have a pair of their Needle Nose pliers where the grips are falling apart. Apparently the material doesn't do well with the constant summer temperatures found in a non-insulated Phoenix workshop. They have been kept in a drawer of a large rolling toolbox their entire life (other than to use on rare occasion). Not sure if they were an ebay or ultimategarage purchase.
 

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neophyte

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Pennsylvannia
Does anyone know how to contact Facom support for warranty purposes? Their website has no option for USA customers. I have a pair of their Needle Nose pliers where the grips are falling apart. Apparently the material doesn't do well with the constant summer temperatures found in a non-insulated Phoenix workshop. They have been kept in a drawer of a large rolling toolbox their entire life (other than to use on rare occasion). Not sure if they were an ebay or ultimategarage purchase.
Back when those were being sold, SK was part of the same tool company, usually branded as SK-Facom, but then SK became an independent tool company, before going bankrupt, and being sold to Ideal Tools, which has since sold SK to Great Star Tools,so I doubt there would be any warranty avenue there.
Facom meanwhile, was sold to Stanley Tools, which still owns the brand, do that might be your best chance.
That series of pliers has since been discontinued, and replaced by a different handle type.
 

JeeperAz

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Messages
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Location
SoCal
...
Facom meanwhile, was sold to Stanley Tools, which still owns the brand, do that might be your best chance.
That series of pliers has since been discontinued, and replaced by a different handle type.

Thank you for the information!
 

Etchase

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How is this made? This France made Facom adjustable wrench has no access to the size adjustment pin. Although the finish is in tough shape, the adjustment mechanism is still smooth. I’ve never seen one like this from any manufacturer.

IMG_2559.jpegIMG_2560.jpegIMG_2561.jpegIMG_2562.jpeg
 

YesIHaveAHammer

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Messages
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How is this made? This France made Facom adjustable wrench has no access to the size adjustment pin.
Spring loaded telescopic pin, I expect. Sort of like what holds a watch strap in place.

Drill pocket holes from the square hole outwards. Compress the pin, push it into the square, when it aligns with the pocket holes it spring expands into them.

If that's how, the next question is why go to all that trouble? I appreciate the effort, but I'm sure SBD's "value engineers" would be mad seeing that.
 

Etchase

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And getting the holes into the handle for the pin to telescope into wouldn’t be easy. Speaking of Stanley, the Proto adjustable wrenches went back to having a screw, after using a press fit pin since 1958.
 
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sashik3

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Oct 4, 2014
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Kansas city
Been lurking this thread for a while — love seeing the Facom love here. Finally have something worth sharing.

I picked up a Facom Cantilever (BT-11A) — the Ferrari Teams Schumacher edition. French-made steel, fold-out trays, classic mechanic's toolbox. The build quality is exactly what you'd expect from Facom. But out of the box it had two issues that drove me nuts: the trays were bare metal so tools rattled and stacked on each other, and the loaded box was genuinely heavy to drag across the garage.

Fixed both for under $40 and a Saturday afternoon.

Upgrade 1 — Custom foam inserts

Cut high-density foam sheet (20–30mm thick) to fit each tray. Traced every tool with a thin marker, cut along the lines, test-fit, trim tight spots. Every tool now has a dedicated home — pull it out, drop it back, nothing rattles, nothing buries another tool. One glance tells you what's missing.

A few things I learned doing mine:
— Use a thin-tip marker. A fat Sharpie bleeds and ruins the line.
— Put the foam on a backer board. Plywood underneath lets the blade pass fully through without skipping.
— Long-blade utility knife, not snap-off blades. Snap-offs break mid-cut every single time in 30mm foam.
— For deep tools (tall ratchets, long pliers): cut all the way through the foam and lay a strip of non-slip drawer liner mat on the tray bottom. Tool sits on the soft mat, surrounded by foam walls. No rattle, no metal-on-metal scratching.

Upgrade 2 — Caster wheels

Four heavy-duty casters — two locking at the front, two non-locking at the rear. Flipped the box upside down on a soft towel, marked four corner holes, drilled pilots, mounted with included screws and washers. Now it rolls smooth on concrete, epoxy, whatever. Locks solid when I'm working.

What's inside: Snap-on ratchets, Wera Zyklop metric set, Knipex pliers, Carlyle ratcheting wrenches, Wera and Wiha insulated drivers. Covers 90% of small household and shop jobs without pulling the full rolling chest out.

Anyone else done foam inserts on their Facom trays? Curious what foam source others have found, and whether anyone's gone with magnetic strips on the inner walls instead.
 

YesIHaveAHammer

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the trays were bare metal
My BT.9 came with pre-cut foam in all compartments (bottom only).

Upgrade 2 — Caster wheels
Would love to see how this looks.

edit: just remembered a Ferrari post, turns out it was you, and I can just catch a glimpse of the casters https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/show-your-mini-tool-box.540556/post-11643849

Here's what I did for feet on mine to avoid the paint getting scratched off the bottom https://www.garagejournal.com/forum...-toolbox-recommendations.547267/post-11220809
 

Ohio Andy

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Jul 31, 2024
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2,247
Location
Columbus, Ohio
Upgrade 1 — Custom foam inserts

Cut high-density foam sheet (20–30mm thick) to fit each tray. Traced every tool with a thin marker, cut along the lines, test-fit, trim tight spots. Every tool now has a dedicated home — pull it out, drop it back, nothing rattles, nothing buries another tool. One glance tells you what's missing.

A few things I learned doing mine:
— Use a thin-tip marker. A fat Sharpie bleeds and ruins the line.
— Put the foam on a backer board. Plywood underneath lets the blade pass fully through without skipping.
— Long-blade utility knife, not snap-off blades. Snap-offs break mid-cut every single time in 30mm foam.
— For deep tools (tall ratchets, long pliers): cut all the way through the foam and lay a strip of non-slip drawer liner mat on the tray bottom. Tool sits on the soft mat, surrounded by foam walls. No rattle, no metal-on-metal scratching.
Nice tips, I purchased some FOAM for some tools that I intend to store in custom made wooden boxes (Chisels), I just need to find the time to make the boxes. I want to make them fancy with wood hinges (never done wood hinges) so that will take some time... Oh, and hand cut dovetails. But I have another project in front of it. I made a r4ather large shoe rack out of figured Walnut and now i need to build the drawers.
Anyone else done foam inserts on their Facom trays? Curious what foam source others have found, and whether anyone's gone with magnetic strips on the inner walls instead.

I bought some foam from


And yes, it is international shipping. Have not even had time to open the box, however.
 

YesIHaveAHammer

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Jun 1, 2025
Messages
790
Thinking about which ratchet suits the Nano boxes.

I already have the RL.171 push release on its own. It's fine, but naturally I always look for something slightly different that might come in handy one day. First thought was rotator but perhaps something so bulky isn't the best choice in a set I'll typically use when I have nothing else to hand.

R.360 rotator
  • Twist handle
  • Quite fat throughout

R.181 high precision
  • 80 teeth (vs. 72) for 4.5 degree (vs.5) increments
  • Twist collar reverser
  • Compact head
R.161BRL.171R.181R.360
Head thickness24232429
Head width, length24.522, 2217.5, 2027
Handle diameter17.2, 19.517, 1921

The only Torx bits in these sets being security ones catch my eye too. Could be a good idea to replace with solid ones.
 
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Dave455

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Location
Sussex, England
Thinking about which ratchet suits the Nano boxes.

I already have the RL.171 push release on its own. It's fine, but naturally I always look for something slightly different that might come in handy one day. First thought was rotator but perhaps something so bulky isn't the best choice in a set I'll typically use when I have nothing else to hand.

R.360 rotator
  • Twist handle
  • Quite fat throughout

R.181 high precision
  • 80 teeth (vs. 72) for 4.5 degree (vs.5) increments
  • Twist collar reverser
  • Compact head
RL.171R.181R.360
Head thickness232429
Head width, length22, 2217.5, 2027
Handle diameter17, 1921

The only Torx bits in these sets being security ones catch my eye too. Could be a good idea to replace with solid ones.
Of all the Facom 1/4 ratchets, I would prefer the classic R.161 IMG_3366.jpeg

Or the R.161B
IMG_3367.jpeg

Another contender is the RL.161, which is neat, but I slightly prefer the round head.
IMG_3368.jpeg

The rotator ratchets are useful tools, and I think worth owning (the bit ratchet too) but I think you’re right and they are a bit bulky for general use.

The R.181 dustproof ratchet is a lovely tool, very high quality. The only thing I find is that the collar you twist to change direction is a bit difficult to grip, particularly if you have greasy fingers. So for automotive jobs, I’d probably prefer one of the others.
IMG_3369.jpeg
 

YesIHaveAHammer

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Messages
790
I would prefer the classic R.161
I'm too late for that unfortunately.

Or the R.161B
I'd seen but overlooked this one actually, thinking it was just the most basic one for the cheapest sets. The head diameter is a rather big 24.5mm, so perhaps its only advantage is ergonomic preference for the reverser switch.

Another contender is the RL.161
Yes, this is just the RL.171 without the release button, so while good, it doesn't bring anything different to the table (which might be just fine).

The R.181 dustproof ratchet is a lovely tool, very high quality. The only thing I find is that the collar you twist to change direction is a bit difficult to grip, particularly if you have greasy fingers. So for automotive jobs, I’d probably prefer one of the others.
I see it does have an indented section for traction, and I think I could manage the very occasional slight difficulty. What I notice from the photo however is that the middle section of the handle (between the grip and the head) is quite fat.

Trust this chap to have all of them and all the bit ratchets too

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four.cycle

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Oct 19, 2015
Messages
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Location
Tacoma, Washington

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Dave455

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Location
Sussex, England
I'm too late for that unfortunately.
Depending on where you are, there are still a few about, but generally not at the cheapest prices.
I'd seen but overlooked this one actually, thinking it was just the most basic one for the cheapest sets. The head diameter is a rather big 24.5mm, so perhaps its only advantage is ergonomic preference for the reverser switch.
I think it's basically the replacement for the R.161. It would be better if they had retained the free wheeling plate, but I think I might prefer the handle.
Yes, this is just the RL.171 without the release button, so while good, it doesn't bring anything different to the table (which might be just fine).
Yes, exactly. The head and the change lever might be preferable (or not) to the R.161B, but I definitely prefer the handle on the R.161B. It feels more durable and I prefer the shape.
I see it does have an indented section for traction, and I think I could manage the very occasional slight difficulty. What I notice from the photo however is that the middle section of the handle (between the grip and the head) is quite fat.
Yes, it does. It's not too bad, but the indented section doesn't give much grip.
Trust this chap to have all of them and all the bit ratchets too

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With the exception of the R.171, so have I!😁
 
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