BerninicaCO3
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2007
- Messages
- 164
Hi!
So I start classes in 3 weeks to train to be an auto technician; under a T-TEN (Toyota) program at my local community college (lincoln tech is nearby too, but wanted $23,000 more dollars with maybe only $500 more in reasons to justify it! that's a hella lot of tools).
Now as they supply our tools, a wise man would wait until late December to buy all of his tools: he'll only need them for January's internship. But I'm a tool addict, so I'm buying now..
In toyota, of course it will be strictly metric; but there's not a certain guarantee that I'll be working at a toyota dealership, or even that the dealership doesn't see non-toyotas time to time. However, as I understand it, cars are going more and more metric, even the domestic manufacturers? (a measure I applaud btw, insisting on SAE is ignorantly patriotic). Even my 20-year-old ford is about 1/2 metric, it's always a fun game to guess whether a given bolt is one or the other.
SO, should I spend anything on SAE tools, or in 20 years, will they be gone? Maybe I'll even get to buy milk and gas by the liter and drive to speedlimits in kph if we're progressive enough!
Second question; is 3/8" also becoming the universal socket size, with 1/4" only for tiny electronics and 1/2" just for your 36mm axle nuts?
Final question: what size range? I can buy 3" sockets if I wanted to. I know I won't see those on any automobile however! Only if I were going to work on industrial equipment.
From what I've gathered, I'm looking at 10-19mm, + 32, 34, 36 for axle nuts? Ought to take care of nigh everything? And in 10-19, get deep, semi, and shallow; wobble/flex and straight, 6pt and 12; all the permutations for the 10-19mm range. For axle nuts, just semi-deep impacts?
Also, only bother with 10-19mm wrenches? Won't ever see a 25mm use in a car...? Or will I?
Let me know what other sizes you've ended up using most often, and if I should take my socket/wrench collection up to say 25mm...?
thanks!
-Bernard
So I start classes in 3 weeks to train to be an auto technician; under a T-TEN (Toyota) program at my local community college (lincoln tech is nearby too, but wanted $23,000 more dollars with maybe only $500 more in reasons to justify it! that's a hella lot of tools).
Now as they supply our tools, a wise man would wait until late December to buy all of his tools: he'll only need them for January's internship. But I'm a tool addict, so I'm buying now..
In toyota, of course it will be strictly metric; but there's not a certain guarantee that I'll be working at a toyota dealership, or even that the dealership doesn't see non-toyotas time to time. However, as I understand it, cars are going more and more metric, even the domestic manufacturers? (a measure I applaud btw, insisting on SAE is ignorantly patriotic). Even my 20-year-old ford is about 1/2 metric, it's always a fun game to guess whether a given bolt is one or the other.
SO, should I spend anything on SAE tools, or in 20 years, will they be gone? Maybe I'll even get to buy milk and gas by the liter and drive to speedlimits in kph if we're progressive enough!
Second question; is 3/8" also becoming the universal socket size, with 1/4" only for tiny electronics and 1/2" just for your 36mm axle nuts?
Final question: what size range? I can buy 3" sockets if I wanted to. I know I won't see those on any automobile however! Only if I were going to work on industrial equipment.
From what I've gathered, I'm looking at 10-19mm, + 32, 34, 36 for axle nuts? Ought to take care of nigh everything? And in 10-19, get deep, semi, and shallow; wobble/flex and straight, 6pt and 12; all the permutations for the 10-19mm range. For axle nuts, just semi-deep impacts?
Also, only bother with 10-19mm wrenches? Won't ever see a 25mm use in a car...? Or will I?
Let me know what other sizes you've ended up using most often, and if I should take my socket/wrench collection up to say 25mm...?
thanks!
-Bernard


