News from Stahlwille:
electronics screwdrivers:
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For the kitchen maybe, for the car for limited use (loose dirt in the trunk etc.). It won´t **** up much and you also won´t be able to get the carpet really clean. It depends how "clean" is "clean" for you though
At the car wash where i worked a while ago we had larger Kärcher and Nilfisk units, some of them with 2 motors....
ECLIPSE 70-24TR - Hacksaw from Spear & Jackson ,full aluminium frame- Up to 200KG Force blade tension,very well made
No COO probably Made in England????
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No Coo- no joy[emoji38]
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It depends on what you are doingThe cordless chain saws are nice for smaller stuff but for thicker things the gasoline saws simply have more torque/power and will cut things easier/faster. I posted some pics a while ago where i cut a tree which was thicker than the length of the bar of the saw and there you noticed that there is a lack of torque/power. It did work out so if you don´t do this all day long it will work. A gas saw with the proper power is more fun though.
Made in PRC
I was looking for a small 24 ltr. compressor but it seems the italians doesn´t make them anymore. Only 50 ltr and bigger. And i was to greedy for a german one from Kaeser....
Or maybe i didn´t look hard enough....Abac, Fima, Fiac, Fini, Nuair etc. ...too many choicesAs a reference for coo i looked here:
https://www.agrieuro.co.uk/air-compressors-c-110.html
(look at the compressors with an italian flag)
Sorry i don´t know. But probably not Germany.Is COO known ?
Wera torque wrenches were (are ?) made by Norbar....but i don´t know if they still are...the new torque wrenches might be from elsewhere...Thanks for this. I noticed there is some really good promotion on the Wera torque wrenches (among other things) at this place right now:
https://www.thetoolacademy.com/wera...ue-wrench-with-reversible-ratchet-64148-p.asp
110ukp plus 15ukp shipping to AU seems like a killer deal on a niiice 300Nm torque wrench?
Last good one I bought was a Norbar 100Nm 1/2" drive and it was more like au$300 10 years ago...
That should workThank you Monte,
I don't need to deep clean, just debris and possible mess by drilling on the walls to hang a few pictures![]()
If you have a chance to test them, do it. Stihl dealers over here for example have promotion days were you can test their tools, i don´t know if you have something like that in Poland too ?I decided to pass for now and bought myself other toysMaybe if I will be able to test it first or watch it live in action.
Like this one ?:This is why I decided to buy used Schneider compressor, small 20ltr Compact 300 unlike the new ones it has white paint and its build in EUIts perfect for small work and I think about 100ltr version too (also older one made in Italy I think). Using 5.5kW compressor to fill tires is a bit annoying
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News from Flex:
2 new cordless polishers ! (Rotary and dual action)
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Have you tried ebay and Amazon DE? I have found Kukko there and at v good price, compare to snap on☺hey monte,
are these wiper arm pullers made by kukko or taiwan/china?
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I want to get the kukko wiper arm pullers, but the only place that has them is snap-on in USA
hey monte,
are these wiper arm pullers made by kukko or taiwan/china?
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I want to get the kukko wiper arm pullers, but the only place that has them is snap-on in USA
Stopped off today at a big box store called B&Q here in England for the first time in 4 years. It's the sort of place I normally avoid. I Checked out the COO of a number of items compared to last time and there are some positive changes.
All the Bosch green corded and battery stuff was made in Hungry with only a few drills in the PRC.
Most of the De Walt battery stuff was made in the Czech Republic, a country noted for high quality and engineering standards. I checked the box contents to confirm. The display drill was made in China with noticeably worse plastic grades and markings.
Garden tools a mixed bag. Some Finnish made Fiskar stuff but a Fiskar pull saw made in Taiwan ! I've just bought a Japanese made one elsewhere one for less money with a vastly superior blade. Virtually everything else Chinese and not particularly cheap.
Various Lawnmowers from Slovenia which is a good move. Less transportation and pollution and better quality for a realistic price.
Hand tools a disaster zone. They used to sell EU made Bahco saws but now it's Irwin made in the PRC and even worse their own brand rubbish. They used to sell Draper Expert pliers which were rebranded Knipex at a decent price now it's Chinesium at almost the same price. In fact, they could probably sell German made NWS for the same price and still turn a decent profit. Screwdrivers, lots in stock but all no brand name rubbish.
Locking pliers Chinese dross, with so much play in them it was laughable. You could buy a Spanish made Grip-On for similar money online.
With such stock selection I wonder if these sort of places will survive given the likes of Amazon and other online tool vendors...
BGS doesn't order their tools from German manufacturers. It can be Taiwan, China or India. In Germany, they have only an office and a warehouse. Sad but true.
Sometimes companies change their suppliers....Didn't they previously offer their tools in Systainers rather than L-Boxxes?
Have you noticed a general shift from Tanos to Sortimo?
maybe they have them:hey monte,
are these wiper arm pullers made by kukko or taiwan/china?
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I want to get the kukko wiper arm pullers, but the only place that has them is snap-on in USA
yes:So will the new Flex cordless polishers come in L-Boxxes?
I've got an Amazon business account and they seem to randomly list whole specialist tool catalogues with bizarre results sometimes https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B003TSRMYC/?tag=atomicindustr-21


Stopped off today at a big box store called B&Q here in England for the first time in 4 years. It's the sort of place I normally avoid. I Checked out the COO of a number of items compared to last time and there are some positive changes some negative.
All the Bosch green corded and battery stuff was made in Hungary with only a few drills made in the PRC.
Most of the De Walt battery stuff was made in the Czech Republic, a country noted for high quality and engineering standards. I checked the box contents to confirm.
The older display drill was made in China with noticeably worse grades of plastic and stencil markings.
Garden tools were a mixed bag. Some Finnish made Fiskar stuff but a Fiskar pull saw made in Taiwan. I've just bought a Japanese made one online for less with a vastly superior blade. Virtually everything else was Chinese and not particularly good compared with European made brands sold elsewhere.
Various Lawnmowers made in Slovenia which is a good move. Less transportation and pollution than making them in Asia but still with a realistic price.


Sometimes companies change their suppliers....
Both companies have many customers but in case of power tools Tanos is the system no.1 ....( Hitachi, Makita, Festool, Mafell, Fein, Metabo, Husqvarna, Lamello, Trumpf, Mirka, Panasonic, Kress). Dewalt, Bosch and Protool (RIP) used Systainers in the past too.
Gedore 8102 Crimper Non-Insulated Terminals (Made by Knipex)
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Gedore 8102 Crimper Non-Insulated Terminals (Made by Knipex)
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I can't see anything similar on the crimping specialists site Wezag though http://www.wezag.de/index.php/en/products/tool-series/crimp-hand-tools
Only ever used/owned no name adjustable spanners which are pretty horrible so wanted to try the old style Bahco as people seem to rate them. Was rusty but after three days in vinegar/salt and a couple of hours with wire wool it looks quite nice. I don't have any imperial tools and found I needed some recently so this will do instead of purchasing an imperial spanner set.
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The presumptively Wezag-made Gedore crimper for non-insulated terminals is their ratcheting model, 8156.
Gedore 8156
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Wezag CK90
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Only ever used/owned no name adjustable spanners which are pretty horrible so wanted to try the old style Bahco as people seem to rate them. Was rusty but after three days in vinegar/salt and a couple of hours with wire wool it looks quite nice. I don't have any imperial tools and found I needed some recently so this will do instead of purchasing an imperial spanner set.
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There's also Rennsteig of course as a possible maker...
https://www.rennsteig.com/en/
They definitely ODM (Knipex for sure).There's also Rennsteig of course as a possible maker...
https://www.rennsteig.com/en/

My question was phrased badly. What I meant to ask was, as someone who follows the industry closely, have you seen a trend of companies migrating from Tanos to Sortimo (or Sortimo to Tanos)?
Knipex is another that I recall offering Systainer-toolpacks in the past, but recently introduced a few Sortimo-based toolpacks now.
Moving from one established storage/organization system to another strikes me as a change not made lightly, absent a big cost reduction or utility improvement. Intuitively, absent some big advantage inertia will keep companies in the same system. From a business perspective, there are dimensional differences that could affect logistics, as well as the hassle of keeping SKUs for two similar-but-different boxes for replacement parts. Also, customers won't be alienated when the new boxes don't lock into the old boxes.
I presume both Tanos and Sortimo offer mobile racks with TÜV-zulassung, so that wouldn't be a reason to migrate.
(Ulterior motive - I'm currently deciding which system gets some of my money
I wouldn't dare to take pictures inside a large store in the UK. Probably be a detained as a possible **********, terrorist or some other such paranoia![]()
yeah maybe it´s better... at the Hornbach store the store detective caught me while taking some pics...
But whatever... i took a pic at the Bauhaus today Honestly i didn´t pay much attention to which system companies choose outside of the power tool business so i can´t comment much. (I don´t need/have their products and there are simply too many companies out there...). In case of power tool companies i didn´t really see a shift from one system to another. Several companies added the systainer to their line up to offer more than the standard plastic/metal cases. I think Bosch switched from Tanos to Sortimo. But the rest ? Tanos might have an advantage since they make the systainer since 1993 while the L-Boxx was invented in 2008. So that´s maybe the reason many companies choose Tanos because the system is well established and many professionals probably own at least one tool from Festool in a systainer. Some companies choose their own system (Dewalt...Milwaukee...) while a few choose the L-Boxx (Flex) maybe because they offer better prices or maybe because Bosch is the largest power tool company over here. Maybe we will see some changes in the future ?My question was phrased badly. What I meant to ask was, as someone who follows the industry closely, have you seen a trend of companies migrating from Tanos to Sortimo (or Sortimo to Tanos)?
Knipex is another that I recall offering Systainer-toolpacks in the past, but recently introduced a few Sortimo-based toolpacks now.
Moving from one established storage/organization system to another strikes me as a change not made lightly, absent a big cost reduction or utility improvement. Intuitively, absent some big advantage inertia will keep companies in the same system. From a business perspective, there are dimensional differences that could affect logistics, as well as the hassle of keeping SKUs for two similar-but-different boxes for replacement parts. Also, customers won't be alienated when the new boxes don't lock into the old boxes.
I presume both Tanos and Sortimo offer mobile racks with TÜV-zulassung, so that wouldn't be a reason to migrate.
(Ulterior motive - I'm currently deciding which system gets some of my money)
Wezag used to make locking pliers tooKnipex folded metal type locking pliers are made by Bollmann. I can't see anything similar on the crimping specialists site Wezag though http://www.wezag.de/index.php/en/products/tool-series/crimp-hand-tools

I've never seen a grip-on style crimper before. How do you like it? Was is a lot cheaper than Gedore's (Wezag-made, from the looks of it, same as Wiha's) non-insulated crimper, 8156? Do you have a ratcheting model to compare it to?
Also interesting that they kept the lock lever red, instead of painting it blue.