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chrissalas1

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Joined
Mar 27, 2014
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138
Location
GR
If money is of no issues (within reason) who makes the best fine tooth 1/4 and 3/8 quick release ratchet? Hazel /Stahwille / Gedor / Wera?
Have you considered the sam ratchet?
Round head,120 teeth,quick release and made in France.Can be found cheap on amazon.



 
OP
M

Monte

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Dec 23, 2008
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Germany
Wolf Garten Cultiweeder

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bulletpruf

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Joined
Nov 28, 2013
Messages
10,911
Location
San Antonio
Went to a market in Skopje, Macedonia today. Most of the sellers were gypsies. Lot of junk, but a few decent pieces here and there. I was just picking up DOE's here and there; speed picking since I didn't have time to screw around. Had a meeting to go to and I was there in a suit and tie; definitely sticking out like a sore thumb.

Anyway, I just picked up whatever struck my fancy - here are all of them.



The smaller ones from top to bottom - Matador 32mm/27 mm - no COO listed but should be Germany; Dowidat #6 23/21, Germany; Wagener 23/21, W. Germany; Orodje Zrece 23/21 - no COO listed but should be Slovenia; WFR 22/20, DDR (East Germany).



The bigger ones, from larger to smaller -

Belzer CU-BE (copper-beryllium) No. C 900, 46/41, Germany (looks like a similar wrench would sell for about $200 new); Eagle Brand 7/8 W, 1 BSF and 3/4 W and 7/8 BSF (Whitworth bolt wrench; larger size is the head size; smaller size is the size of the bolt shank) made in England and super thick/stout; Tang 27/24, No. 101, made in Yugoslavia; Walter 30/32, No. 39 DIN 839, Germany.



Anyone have any more details on these? The Belzer and Eagle Brand DOE's are the oddest ones of the bunch.

Let me know if anyone wants closeups of anything.

Wrenches were about $1 each, except for the Belzer and Eagle Brand.

Scott
 
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chrissalas1

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2014
Messages
138
Location
GR
Went to a market in Skopje, Macedonia today. Most of the sellers were gypsies. Lot of junk, but a few decent pieces here and there. I was just picking up DOE's here and there; speed picking since I didn't have time to screw around. Had a meeting to go to and I was there in a suit and tie; definitely sticking out like a sore thumb.

Anyway, I just picked up whatever struck my fancy - here are all of them.



The smaller ones from top to bottom - Matador 32mm/27 mm - no COO listed but should be Germany; Dowidat #6 23/21, Germany; Wagener 23/21, W. Germany; Orodje Zrece 23/21 - no COO listed but should be Slovenia; WFR 22/20, DDR (East Germany).



The bigger ones, from larger to smaller -

Belzer CU-BE (copper-beryllium) No. C 900, 46/41, Germany (looks like a similar wrench would sell for about $200 new); Eagle Brand 7/8 W, 1 BSF and 3/4 W and 7/8 BSF (Whitworth bolt wrench; larger size is the head size; smaller size is the size of the bolt shank) made in England and super thick/stout; Tang 27/24, No. 101, made in Yugoslavia; Walter 30/32, No. 39 DIN 839, Germany.



Anyone have any more details on these? The Belzer and Eagle Brand DOE's are the oddest ones of the bunch.

Let me know if anyone wants closeups of anything.

Wrenches were about $1 each, except for the Belzer and Eagle Brand.

Scott
Here in Macedonia we do not have a city named Skopje.We have cities named Thessaloniki,Serres,Polygyros,
Katerini etc.....
It is other place the Macedonia and other the Fyrom
 
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Superbec

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Sep 7, 2015
Messages
931
Location
Netherlands
Went to a market in Skopje, Macedonia today. Most of the sellers were gypsies. Lot of junk, but a few decent pieces here and there. I was just picking up DOE's here and there; speed picking since I didn't have time to screw around.

Scott

So what's the point of buying all that junk? I bet you have better wrenches , even doubles ... and how many times do you actually use an open end?

that eagle is opened like a stripper's legs ...
 

bulletpruf

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Joined
Nov 28, 2013
Messages
10,911
Location
San Antonio
So what's the point of buying all that junk? I bet you have better wrenches , even doubles ... and how many times do you actually use an open end?

that eagle is opened like a stripper's legs ...

Junk? These are quality wrenches that have lasted decades and will last for decades more. Does it bother you that they're not a matched set? Or that they'e not all shiny and clean? I think I'm all out of tool polish, so they're going to stay that way.

And yes, I do have nice DBE's, deep offset DBE's, DOE's, stubby DOE's, etc. But the work that I do sometimes requires modifying wrenches to work (bending, grinding, etc), and I'd rather do it with one of my spares than one from a matched set.
 

Superbec

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Sep 7, 2015
Messages
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Netherlands
Junk? These are quality wrenches that have lasted decades and will last for decades more. Does it bother you that they're not a matched set? Or that they'e not all shiny and clean? I think I'm all out of tool polish, so they're going to stay that way.

And yes, I do have nice DBE's, deep offset DBE's, DOE's, stubby DOE's, etc. But the work that I do sometimes requires modifying wrenches to work (bending, grinding, etc), and I'd rather do it with one of my spares than one from a matched set.

Nothing bothers me, it's your money .

Call it what you want, I know hoarding when I see it..

If you don't actually need it you have 0 reason to buy it .
No, some future "need" for some project it's not actual need.

I don't care for chrome , I care for usefulness and some singles crow-footed and beat up wrenches are not exactly useful ...maybe for a blacksmith
 

losvre

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Joined
Dec 13, 2011
Messages
1,199
Location
UK
Nice stuff muffin man,

How do you find the Felo screwdriver compare to other good brands?

Thank you
 

The Muffin Man

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Joined
Dec 13, 2008
Messages
1,018
Location
Mercer County, NJ
Nice stuff muffin man,

How do you find the Felo screwdriver compare to other good brands?

Thank you

Thanks!

I very much like Felo's screwdrivers. They are right up there with Wera, Facom, Snap-on. The "ergo" series is very comfortable. I wish I could have the felo handles on all my ratchets, that would be amazing.

Here is some more pictures of my Felo screwdrivers.





I'm a little bit bananas when it comes to screwdrivers, here is only some of my screwdriver sets...

 

losvre

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Joined
Dec 13, 2011
Messages
1,199
Location
UK
Wow man, these are a lot of screwdrivers.

Very nice and very pricey!

Are you working on cars or other equipment? I was wondering because I work on my car and the bike and a coupl of sets cover all the work.

Have a Good day



Sent from my HTC Desire 620 using Tapatalk
 

The Muffin Man

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Joined
Dec 13, 2008
Messages
1,018
Location
Mercer County, NJ
Wow man, these are a lot of screwdrivers.

Very nice and very pricey!

Are you working on cars or other equipment? I was wondering because I work on my car and the bike and a coupl of sets cover all the work.

Have a Good day



Sent from my HTC Desire 620 using Tapatalk

Thank you! As far as hobbies go... I work on dirtbikes, motorcycles, and some automotive work. Professionally I work on electronics, server mainframes and computers. hence why I have a screwdriver compulsion; Its the main tool I utilize. I find that screws and other fasteners of this type are sometimes out of tolerance compared to specs so one brand of screwdrivers might fit better than another and vice vera. Screwdrivers are often price wise cheaper to collect/accumulate compared to other tools so that also probably why I have so many sets :D.

Some more Felo pics!!!!





 

Dave455

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Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
5,796
Location
Sussex, England
Eagle Brand 7/8 W, 1 BSF and 3/4 W and 7/8 BSF (Whitworth bolt wrench; larger size is the head size; smaller size is the size of the bolt shank) made in England and super thick/stout;



Anyone have any more details on these? The Belzer and Eagle Brand DOE's are the oddest ones of the bunch.

Actually, British Standard Whitworth and British Standard Fine are different thread pitches. For a given size of bolt, the BSF use a smaller bolt head than the Whitworth! The markings mean that the big end of your wrench will fit a bolt of 7/8 Whitworth or 1 inch BSF - in either case that's the bolt size not the head size!
 
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losvre

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 13, 2011
Messages
1,199
Location
UK
Thank you! As far as hobbies go... I work on dirtbikes, motorcycles, and some automotive work. Professionally I work on electronics, server mainframes and computers. hence why I have a screwdriver compulsion; Its the main tool I utilize. I find that screws and other fasteners of this type are sometimes out of tolerance compared to specs so one brand of screwdrivers might fit better than another and vice vera. Screwdrivers are often price wise cheaper to collect/accumulate compared to other tools so that also probably why I have so many sets :D.

Some more Felo pics!!!!





Hello again,

You really have lots of drivers!

Not sure if you have had experience with that kind of screwdriver below but what is your opinion about them?

Is it worth to have a ratcheting one?

Are these kind of Bit holders usable with changing the bits, sturdy etc.

Thanks

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HCNDM

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Joined
Oct 20, 2015
Messages
682
Location
Netherlands (tiny little country in western Europe
Who has some experience with Montex File Grips? There made in Italy but there is very little information to find. The handle has threads so you can 'screw' it on the file. I am curious how this works.



http://www.delftechniek.nl/montex



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I have Some of the brown ones. They hold sturdy.

The threads collapse on the harder file steel making for a tight grip.

As too how it works...

Stick your file in a vise (tang side up) (wrap it in an old T-shirt to protect your vise.

Stick the handle on the tang and rotate. It will screw itself on like a re-threader.

Two minutes per file.

These should be reusable but that's not something I tried.


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Cybermike

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Joined
Nov 15, 2014
Messages
65
Location
The Netherlands
Thanks m8 :thumbup:

I will try one out.

I have Some of the brown ones. They hold sturdy.

The threads collapse on the harder file steel making for a tight grip.

As too how it works...

Stick your file in a vise (tang side up) (wrap it in an old T-shirt to protect your vise.

Stick the handle on the tang and rotate. It will screw itself on like a re-threader.

Two minutes per file.

These should be reusable but that's not something I tried.


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Dave455

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Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
5,796
Location
Sussex, England
Who has some experience with Montex File Grips? There made in Italy but there is very little information to find. The handle has threads so you can 'screw' it on the file. I am curious how this works.

http://www.delftechniek.nl/montex

vijlheft-235x235.jpg

A144336.jpg

The same handles, albeit in red, used to be sold by Simmonds!

I found they worked o.k. but nothing special. About 1 in 4 times the thing would still wobble, and probably more often if you re use the handle!

If you have decent files I like the PB Swiss handles the best, and if you replace a file with an identical one they can be re used fine!

To be honest, having done a lot of filing over the years (including some jobs that probably should have been done on a mill) you can't beat buying files with factory fitted handles!
 

dutchgray

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Joined
Sep 28, 2014
Messages
6,461
Location
Dorset. England.
Especially if they are Bahco Ergo handled files, those are nice, my files range from any old handle, traditional round wood ones to a few of the PB ones.
 

Blöckw@rt

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Joined
Jan 11, 2013
Messages
662
Location
Germany
Engelbert Strauss screwdrivers made by Athlet (Germany)

Very good quality :thumbup:....unfortunately not as well known like Wiha, Wera, Felo..................



 

HCNDM

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 20, 2015
Messages
682
Location
Netherlands (tiny little country in western Europe
Especially if they are Bahco Ergo handled files, those are nice, my files range from any old handle, traditional round wood ones to a few of the PB ones.


Same here. OP asked about those handles so I answered but the reality is I have a huge mix of files and handles.

I prefer not doing my handles but high grade very fine files which I use for my precious metal smithing are never provided with a handle for some reason.

Some of those I have plastic handles on like above. Most have a wooden handle.

For steel and knife making I always grab a bahcos. Probably also because they are cheap and easy to get.

Will try to get some pics of my files. A great many are rescued from garage sales and flea markets and are old school made in Europe.


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M

Monte

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Joined
Dec 23, 2008
Messages
12,661
Location
Germany
news from Fein:
new accessoires for their 12 volt drill: carbide jaw chuck, tap holder, bit holder, socket holder and a set which includes everything.

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losvre

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Joined
Dec 13, 2011
Messages
1,199
Location
UK
news from Fein:
new accessoires for their 12 volt drill: carbide jaw chuck, tap holder, bit holder, socket holder and a set which includes everything.

27125082sv.jpg

Thanks for the info Monte,

This one looks like the Metabo quick, is it?

Cheers
 
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