Nocturnal-G
Well-known member
I don't understand what he's saying in the video but it seems to be a test of a few wrenches including the Stahlwille wrench...
Lok, do you use that driver often?
I like your toolbox. I mean ... everything is well-arranged in there. Mine is such a mess. I consider of getting myself one of those american Veto Pro Pac bags.
your local Stahlwille dealer should be able to get you VBW tools too.Monte, where can we buy tools from VBW Winter-Aktion 2012? Thank you
http://www.vbw.de/vbw_uk/index1.htm
with my Würth screwdriver ?Monte can you do the same with yours?![]()
the only thing i know is the tool/battery has a 3 year warranty and a extra anti theft warranty, so maybe i should try it out to see what exactly is coveredThanks monte, I have some other tools as well but still nothing like your collection. Does the Festool warranty cover for impact damage if the bit slips out of the screw.
i knowThanks, but I do hope you know that you are a bad influence on me?
R.I.P. Stahlwille wrenchAfter seeing the Stahlwille ductility test you youtube, I couldn't help but want to play too.

how to break a good toolAnd what did I learn from all this?
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However, they do sell 90 degree twisted wrenches in the states, so imagine what a 360 degree one would be worth![]()

Homage to Monte;13mm Gedore
I don't understand what he's saying in the video but it seems to be a test of a few wrenches including the Stahlwille wrench...

Ive noticed alot of comments regarding the video I posted, alot of "Whats your point" type comments. I think the video is just showing the ductility of the tool, its ability to deform before failure.
I like my stahlwille's very nice wrenches.
in the german test they tested the Stahlwille "Open Box 13", instead they should have tested the "Open Box 14" which has a thicker jaw and higher box end.... just like the Hazet 600N.....That would be a fair comparison....
http://img839.imageshack.us/img839/9958/a1qweaq099.jpg[IMG][/QUOTE]
And in fact my Stahlwille are Type 15, which is discontinued but on the closed end is the same as Type 14, which may explain why I have the preferences I do despite owning both Stahlwille and Hazet.
in the german test they tested the Stahlwille "Open Box 13", instead they should have tested the "Open Box 14" which has a thicker jaw and higher box end.... just like the Hazet 600N.....That would be a fair comparison....[/IMG]
Wrench test:
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Sorry fanboys but soft wrenches are not an advantage if they permanently bend long before competitors reach their fail point.
Stahlwille wrench severely bent at 155 foot pounds
Two Snap-On wrenches, Hazet, and even a wrench forged in India (HR), amongst others, hit the torque limit of 177 foot pounds on the box end and did not deform, break, or bend. Bending wrenches is NOT a good thing.
Brings a bit of irony to the "Stronger than any bolt" they stamp in.
Sorry fanboys but soft wrenches are not an advantage if they permanently bend long before competitors reach their fail point.
Stahlwille wrench severely bent at 155 foot pounds
Two Snap-On wrenches, Hazet, and even a wrench forged in India (HR), amongst others, hit the torque limit of 177 foot pounds on the box end and did not deform, break, or bend. Bending wrenches is NOT a good thing.
Brings a bit of irony to the "Stronger than any bolt" they stamp in.

Some purchases in the last few months


Some purchases in the last few months
30 piece Hazet 600N set (5.5mm to 41mm)
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What a brilliant collection.
You are the first I have seen to have posted the full 30 piece Hazet set. I am in awe. I have the 17 piece set up to 27mm , but it is a baby compared to the 41mm.
How do you plan to store them?
I meant to say I was glad to see your Hazet sets arrived OK. Somehow I miss-typed. Thank you, Jason
I don't understand what he's saying in the video but it seems to be a test of a few wrenches including the Stahlwille wrench...
I don't understand what he's saying in the video but it seems to be a test of a few wrenches including the Stahlwille wrench...
but its the beam that fails (bends) not the actual box end walls, unless the beams are thicker too. Still, the Japanese magazine test didn't do any favors for stahlwille either, showing similar bending at lower loads than competitors, and they tested double box wrenches too. Interestingly in this test the hazet combo seems to of bent similarly with the two German brands being the stand outs in deformation in the combos.
This test is 17mm wrenches by the way.
I still say premature bending is not a trait to be valued.
I don't think you fully understand the point of the chart you just quoted. You seem to be getting a bit confused between maximum torque, the temper and quality of the steel and the actual wrench design.
The maximum torque a wrench can take depends on the actual wrench design as much as the steel quality. (By wrench design I mean thickness and shape.)
The Hazet is the strongest but it is also the thickest. Snap On does **** on the open end but it also has the narrowest jaw design.
It does not list one as being better than the other.
This is how I got it:
pic
and the finished article:
pic
Sadly, it has to go as since purchasing it, I acquired a more compact Fobco drill which I am currently restoring.
I understand that they make tools that bend at torque numbers where others hold their shape. Doesn't necessarily make the latter poor wrenches at all. As you stated they'll never see that abuse without mis-use anyway.
Yep, it clearly does, ranks them infact and names overall best wrench and overall best bargain. That was the point to the test. Read it.
Neophyte you need to watch less "1000 ways to die" and spend more time with your wrenches. Odds of breaking a quality wrench without a defect are nill and the only way something horrible like you described would happen would be if the user was an idiot putting, literally, hundreds of pounds of force on a combo wrench. Even trying such a tactic in the aerospace industry would get your **** canned in short order.
Yep, it clearly does, ranks them infact and names overall best wrench and overall best bargain. That was the point to the test. Read it.
Nice haul CanUK. I dig that Accles & Shelvoke vice. Old?
Found one on ebay that has been up for £50 for a while.
Cool. I found this page earlier. Note the catalog pic and the year 1937 Listed Exhibitor... Quick-grip Manufacturing Machine Vices.
From this thread on Garage journal. http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=51783&page=2 "I broke a 10mm Craftsman, Craftsman pro, Snap-on, and Popular Mechanics on the same bolt one night. Pissed me off. All were warrantied, though.I understand that they make tools that bend at torque numbers where others hold their shape. Doesn't necessarily make the latter poor wrenches at all. As you stated they'll never see that abuse without mis-use anyway.
Yep, it clearly does, ranks them infact and names overall best wrench and overall best bargain. That was the point to the test. Read it.
Neophyte you need to watch less "1000 ways to die" and spend more time with your wrenches. Odds of breaking a quality wrench without a defect are nill and the only way something horrible like you described would happen would be if the user was an idiot putting, literally, hundreds of pounds of force on a combo wrench. Even trying such a tactic in the aerospace industry would get your **** canned in short order.
Just got some info back from Accles and Shelvoke. The vice was produced until 1999 (they didn't say when it started but I don't imagine a very long time before that):
If I were to judge, just from the look and techniques used in that flyer, I´d say that they are from the 50´s. Two-color printing, letterset press, hand drawings, hand-set typography (note the spacing of the letters in the fact columns). Love that style...