KingCobra98
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2014
- Messages
- 173
So when and how did it fail? From your first post it sounds like you had taken it out from the car and then it failed?
it fell apart after using it. I will post pictures in a couple hours
So when and how did it fail? From your first post it sounds like you had taken it out from the car and then it failed?
it fell apart after using it. I will post pictures in a couple hours

It looks like it just needs a roll pin to fix it.
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Picture 2
12" sliding double bevel miter saw - PASS
http://www.harborfreight.com/12-in-...r-saw-with-laser-guide-system-69684-9104.html
Red laser line is all but useless in clarity and accuracy, features no brake but the guard is decent enough that it doesn't present a safety problem.
Used it for several months straight, making most of the furniture in my new house. More or less zero complaints and I've used DeWalt ones for years (not to say they are as nice as DeWalt).
Pipe/Tubing Notcher - PASSISH
http://www.harborfreight.com/pipe-tubing-notcher-42324.html
Not altogether terrible. Wasn't on center out of box, so I machined the mount down to make it center. Used to notch every tube in my 1.75x.120 roll-cage. Decent as long as you have a nice Bosch hole saw and cutting lube/coolant.
2.5 Liter Ultrasonic Cleaner - PASS
http://www.harborfreight.com/25-liter-ultrasonic-cleaner-95563.html
Great little cleaner. I abuse it, using it to clean .308 and 6.5 Swede brass for reloading. I got it on sale + coupon so sprung for warranty, didn't need it. Been using it for years.
.... Jack stands won't drop their load if the pin falls out though.

It looks like it just needs a roll pin to fix it.
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I'm sure you're right about that. The weight on the upright will keep the pawl jammed against the the teeth so it won't slip. But... if the release handle happens to work its way out of one of the holes in the base while you are moving it... And then... Well, let's say things could get interesting real fast, if that handle is only supported on one side of the base when you lower the weight onto it.
I'm definitely going to check ALL of my jackstands right away.
Thanks.
Going to be purchasing the 12" sliding dual compound miter saw here pretty soon, thanks for the quick review. Watched a video on how to fix the laser alignment issue, but I've never relied on them anyhow LOL so not a big deal for me. My whole idea is to buy it and use it for its intended purpose, as long as it works I'll be fine with that. My 10" model is still going strong and going on 6 or 7 years can't remember for sure, its been a long time I know LOL. Just need the extra capacity occasionally and can't see spending $600-700 on a Dewalt...I'd love to but that's more than I make in a month so totally out of the budget.
Picture 2
It's a solid enough unit, it really opens up your options considering how wide the material you can cut with it is. Some of the complaints I see are about the miter/angle adjustments, it will notch into the 45 degree and other common angle slots automatically - but when you tighten the adjustment in place (which you must do) it can often walk a little from the 45 degree line - sometimes unavoidably so. I havent found this to be a huge problem because I'm often measuring my angles on test cuts in order to get 44 degree or other cuts anyways so fine adjust regardless, but for some who want quick exact 45's - I wouldn't be too confident in just slamming it into position and tightening it down.
Besides that, a finer/higher tooth count blade would be a smart buy if you want less blow out for nice solid woods - otherwise just do what i do and double stack on drops. The material clamps kinda **** too, but work when needed.
Just FYI, I paid $148.68 shipped using a discount specific to the saw while it was on sale - you can even find the coupons on ebay being sold but can just steal the code from them. Definitely worth it that way, I have a lot of DeWalt and Mikita tools, but this one would have really hurt the pocket book.
For the CMS or SCMS, 10" or 12", I would also check CL for name brand
I have this in my box and it seems to work great. I don't use it all the time but when I do it does it job.I'll agree with both of these comments..
Center punch is wasted money. Transfer punch set isn't bad at all.
For anyone who uses a ratchet, the Item#96092 3/8 In. Ratchet With Indexable Head is in my opinion the coolest tool on the planet. I love this thing, and I don't think anyone else has a ratchet as useful as it.
Snap-on had their F872MP Multi-Position Head Ratchet which they no longer make and Matco has their BIR10 3/8" DRIVE INDEXABLE RATCHET for $132.50, but the Snap-on was not designed as well as the HF and the MATCO has all the failings of the Snap-on but is in addition missing a crucial feature, 360° indexing/swinging rotation.
The HF ratchet is made by William Tools Co. of Taiwan, which specializes in ratchet (handles), torque wrenches and multipliers. According to their site, Snap-on's subsidiary CDI used them to help build the components of their Digital Torque Wrench.
Anyhow, where this ratchet excels is its ability to access nuts and bolts and its ability to remove or install them much, much faster than a regular ratchet, any other ratchet!
My observations:
- It is very well made, with tight tolerances, fitment, and what appears to be a very deep chrome and polish.
- It has a fantastic, very easy to actuate metal rocker switch on the handle for locking/unlocking the swivel-indexing ratchet head.
- The ratchet head can be 'stroked' like a rod and crank by just linearly pushing and pulling the handle for rapid ratchet rotation with no handle swing, truly zero swing clearance required.
- When space permits, you can rotate the head in circles by the handle for very fast fastener run-in/out. It works well and fast enough I almost never use my pneumatic ratchets anymore. Because you push/pull and twist the handle with your wrist when sending the head in circles, considerable torque is available without having to slow down and resort to using the ratchet in a locked position to get though lightly burred or dirty threads like a regular ratchet would have you do.
- Because of the ease of actuation of the swivel/indexing switch this ratchet can really speed up very tedious jobs; you can so easily use the tip of a finger or screwdriver blade to flip between swivel and indexing, even in very tight locations, that like I said, you don't even need to run your cumbersome noisy air ratchet anymore.
- The indexing available on this ratchet compounds the gear teeth number of the ratchet by allowing the re-indexing of the handle with respect to the ratchet head in order to catch a gear tooth that would not normally be available in a regular ratchet.
- And of course, by re-indexing the head, one can ratchet around obstacles to nuts and bolts that are absolutely inaccessible to regular ratchets or wrenches.
I am a mechanical engineer and would be very proud to have designed this tool.
On the Snap-on/Matco note, what I see as a major failure in their design, which, snicker snicker, I guess Snap-on came to realise since they stopped making it, is the clunky nature mechanically, ergonomically, and aesthetically of their swivel pins, and its method of engaging and disengaging. What really surprised me in using the HF tool is how important the quick and easy switching of modes is. Neither the Snap-on or MATCO design allow one fingered hard to reach light touch operation and I have found that this is where the beauty of this tool lies. I have been using it long and often enough now that I don't even think about flipping that switch. Even simple jobs have me switching back and forth, and back and forth, and back and forth again, without effort... well I hope you get the idea.
A good example of why I switch back on forth on even a simple job is the, to me, very unexpected benefit of less rotational inertia. When I want to run a bolt in or out and don't have the clearance to use the swivel's 360° I have found that I re-index the handle so the handle is flipped back over the ratchet head, in line and over it, this greatly reduces the rotation inertia of the handle hanging out there and gives me a hold like a T-handled wrench that also happens to have a ratchet mechanism. The comfort and speed is like the difference between a T-handled ratcheting tap wrench, a non-ratcheting tap wrench, and having a Vise-Grip clamped down on the square shank of your tap... which is faster, easier, safer, and more satisfying? If you ever have to tap anything, do yourself the courtesy of acquiring a ratcheting tap wrench. Mater of fact, I do believe HF sells one for a fairly reasonable amount.
Well, I think this about concludes my survey of this, to me, marvelous tool.
Oh, sorry, I forgot the negatives. No seals. and it would be nice to have a few more teeth in the ratchet mechanism, how can they not have given it 80!
That's it folks.
Be good, think well of others, and dream dream dream of tools....
P.S. I stripped mine down the first day to see what I could see, and I liked it, but I also packed it with some white lithium grease. It will last longer, its smoother, and it is quieter, even if there is a little more drag.
#99849 Ball Joint separator, Pass. It was failed in 2012 on here, but the secret is too tighten it until some pressure is exerted, whack things with a hammer, then tighten some more. About the third time, in less than a minute, pop!
Two lower ball joints separated in less than 5 minutes is nice in my book.
Being that it's not direct drive, it is of course a bit louder. Is it louder than belt driven DeWalt models? Perhaps, I cant say for sure but I would error on saying it is. I dont use it indoors, so it's hard to compare to the DeWalt which is now permanently indoors.Thanks. I don't do much in the way of precision, and most of my cuts are 45 degrees anyhow, and I always use my protractor to set the angle on my 10" saw so no surprise there. Most of the complaint's I've actually heard were regarding the laser guide, I may just move the laser from my 10" saw over to the 12" saw when I get it. My 10" model I bought an Irwin laser guide, which just mounts on the blade spindle and its been darn accurate. The laser guide has 2 batteries if I remember correctly, and after 5 years of moderate use I had to replace the batteries for the first time this past spring. I may look into buying a 2nd laser guide if this saw turns out to be worthwhile. I have a coupon that I got out of an American Rifleman magazine bringing the cost of the saw down to $129.99 + tax. I've had that magazine subscription for several years and never payed any attention to the harbor freight section, they also have 20% off single item coupons in them quite often as well.
How is the noise level from this saw compared to the others? My 10" isn't too bad actually given its a direct drive unit, the 12" I noticed is a belt drive similar to the higher end Dewalt 12" models.
I'm going to be purchasing a 12" Diablo blade if the saw turns out to be worth keeping...which if its anything close to the 10" one I have now it will be just fine for what I do. Mainly just hobby stuff, but here lately I've been needing to cut some wide crown molding and well the 10" just doesn't get through it.
Being that it's not direct drive, it is of course a bit louder. Is it louder than belt driven DeWalt models? Perhaps, I cant say for sure but I would error on saying it is. I dont use it indoors, so it's hard to compare to the DeWalt which is now permanently indoors.
. I'd be interested in knowing what that material is (on the makita, or any other 'good brand') and what adhesive is used. I'm sure I have worn down the pad on my PC finish sander and if that's the only thing stopping the HF sander from being good, I'd just buy some pad and fix it.

I find it impossible to decide whether Harbor Freight Tool items are pass or fail because the last 17 times I went there, coupon in hand, I left without buying anything. I even passed on the freebies; I don't have the space to waste on useless things.

Well...they have some name brand incidental stuff you could buy that (if the coupon allows it). Like wd-40, superlube, stuff like that. I think they have grease which is probably just rebranded from a major supplier. Hardly useless stuff man.![]()
If you can go to HF 17 times without buying anything or even using a free item coupon you either don't belong on GJ or are the biggest tool snob on the planet.I find it impossible to decide whether Harbor Freight Tool items are pass or fail because the last 17 times I went there, coupon in hand, I left without buying anything. I even passed on the freebies; I don't have the space to waste on useless things.
If you can go to HF 17 times without buying anything or even using a free item coupon you either don't belong on GJ or are the biggest tool snob on the planet.






If you can go to HF 17 times without buying anything or even using a free item coupon you either don't belong on GJ or are the biggest tool snob on the planet.