Are you compensating for something?
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
Either a stubby bit or a short extension
Are you compensating for something?
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
Are you compensating for something?
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal

Koken on the right. Second pic shows the difference more clearly.
I like those....Facom D.163-J6 low profile canister filter sockets. Bought used from Ebay. No COO. Assume they are from Taiwan but could be China, France etc.
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I like that Vessel ratcheting screwdriver.
Greetings to Romania (I love your shop),
I bought them a few years ago as a new set in Germany. They looked great when they arrived. I used the Phillips #1 or 2 for a simple task and noticed the tip deformed and was soft (the ridges of the philips appeared deformed). I am an amateur watchmaker as well so I know the importance of selecting the right screwdriver for the job with the right tip that fits (example: using Pozidrive for Pozidrive and not using Philips in exchange, etc). I was sad about this so I just gave them to my Porsche mechanic friend after one or two uses (only using the Phillips drivers in the set). Made in Slovenia didn’t really bother me as I know really good manufacturing quality exists in Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Hungary, Poland, Bulgaria, etc....so I am not one of the “wave the flag” German-only fans.
I am a long-time Facom user (20+ years) and tried some Hazet recently but was not impressed. I bought this 6 screwdriver Hazet set (made in Slovenia) and the tips were so soft they deformed on the first use. I gave them to my Porsche mechanic friend. Not impressed.
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That vintage set is cool.
My favorite screwdrivers are the ones with the Isoryl handle. I like the way the handle looks and I use them a lot and I never had any problems with them.
Thank you!
I am not doubting your feedback, but it's kind of surprising to me because I never had any bad experiences with Hazet.
A Hazet screwdriver set is very expensive when you compare it with a normal screwdriver set, so it's logical to expect top quality.
Those particular Hazet drivers are their ‘budget’ line. They are generic Oplast drivers with handles in Hazet blue. They are available very cheaply, here in the U.K. they were available for the equivalent of $18 and that included tax and delivery.
Considering the screwdrivers. I have various brands: Wera, Wiha, Felo, Witte, Stahlwille, Hazet (german, not slovenian made oplast), Belzer, Schroeder, Bahco (sweden made), etc.
I am also familiar with USA brands, Beta, Facom....
There are people on this forum (like Monte, mr. lemons, Dave455, etc) that can certainly give an expert opinion about brands, as I don't use screwdrivers every day.
Of course, Wiha and Wera are top notch. They are the Knipex of screwdrivers.Scroeder is, in some way, unknown brand - but makes (in my opinion) very nice screwdrivers. Stahlwille drall is fantastic. Old hazet's (german made) are great. Etc, etc, etc.
However, I have a feeling (maybe I am wrong) that old red Belzer screwdrivers (marked Germany, or W. Germany) are probably the best screwdrivers ever made. Again, maybe I am wrong, but they seem almost indestructible.
So far, my favorites are probably the Facom/USAG, Wera, Witte, and Bahco. The Facom feel the highest quality in the hand and are pretty comfortable
Sent from my Pixel 2 using The Garage Journal mobile app
There are people on this forum (like Monte, mr. lemons, Dave455, etc) that can certainly give an expert opinion about brands, as I don't use screwdrivers every day.
Of course, Wiha and Wera are top notch. They are the Knipex of screwdrivers.Scroeder is, in some way, unknown brand - but makes (in my opinion) very nice screwdrivers. Stahlwille drall is fantastic. Old hazet's (german made) are great. Etc, etc, etc.
However, I have a feeling (maybe I am wrong) that old red Belzer screwdrivers (marked Germany, or W. Germany) are probably the best screwdrivers ever made. Again, maybe I am wrong, but they seem almost indestructible.
The nicest thing when you have the facom and USAG ones is that you have different blade sizes for the same tip...
I’m no expert - just been fortunate enough to use a lot of different makes, and interested enough to notice! Many times though, factories choose what’s readily available.
I am not sure I understand. Please explain. I have Facom and USAG both.
Are you talking about length of the shank/shaft on these screwdrivers?
I bought this 6 screwdriver Hazet set (made in Slovenia) and the tips were so soft they deformed on the first use. I gave them to my Porsche mechanic friend. Not impressed.
I am a long-time Facom user (20+ years) and tried some Hazet recently but was not impressed.
There are people on this forum (like Monte, mr. lemons, Dave455, etc)
to the other guys on this thread. Just came here for a bit guidance on upgrading some of my tools and it became a bit of a hobby. Still learning mostly by making errors. Those particular Hazet drivers are their ‘budget’ line. They are generic Oplast drivers with handles in Hazet blue. They are available very cheaply, here in the U.K. they were available for the equivalent of $18 and that included tax and delivery.
Those Hazet drivers are indeed at the low end of Hazet's quality, but than again so is the priceTheir 'Budgetline' is Vigor. https://www.vigor-equipment.de/index.php Just like Gedore and Gedore Red.
This is an amazing thread.....
I am a long-time Facom user (20+ years) and tried some Hazet recently but was not impressed. I bought this 6 screwdriver Hazet set (made in Slovenia) and the tips were so soft they deformed on the first use. I gave them to my Porsche mechanic friend. Not impressed.
90 percent of what I buy is French (Facom) or Swiss (PB Swiss). They have never let me down but I am not using them daily, only for fun projects.

Picked up some Irwin pliers and a used pair of Mole Grips.
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Didn't know Mole Grips were available with curved hardened jaws. Only seen straight jaws or non hardened curved. These also have cutters for some reason.
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The nicest thing when you have the facom and USAG ones is that you have different blade sizes for the same tip...
I am not sure I understand. Please explain. I have Facom and USAG both.
Are you talking about length of the shank/shaft on these screwdrivers?
I hadn't even thought of that, and had not paid attention to what sizes were actually offered from each. I've bought several sets of the Protwist, some from Facom and some from USAG, just whatever was on sale at the moment, and then combined them.I Think do you Have facom enduro and USAG 323..Or the last models of USAG/facom are the same in handle (Protwist) but their sets have different shank's size length (for example in PH2 facom have 5" and USAG 4") so i wanted to ask him if he switched from one to another because i found the facom one is to heavy for some applications and i should change to USAG to work in comfort, also in other cases changing for a hexagonal shank bring confort..
However, I have a feeling (maybe I am wrong) that old red Belzer screwdrivers (marked Germany, or W. Germany) are probably the best screwdrivers ever made. Again, maybe I am wrong, but they seem almost indestructible.
Totally with you regarding Belzer, they were my Dad’s all time favourite! I still have his, but few others. The handle shape (my all time favourite) was copied by Kamasa in the 80’s, but the blades were not as good!
I hadn't even thought of that, and had not paid attention to what sizes were actually offered from each. I've bought several sets of the Protwist, some from Facom and some from USAG, just whatever was on sale at the moment, and then combined them.
Looking through USAG's and Facom's online catalogues, I'm now realizing there are more varieties of even the basic Phillips screwdrivers than I had thought, so I'm not even sure which ones I have between the sand-blasted tips and black-coated tips.
I like Felo, too. Especially for use on Mercedes-Benz fasteners. It seems like they were made for Felo and the fit is 100% perfect. In fact, I will only use Felo on MB fasteners.
I’m no expert - just been fortunate enough to use a lot of different makes, and interested enough to notice!
I used to work for a company that did a lot of repetitive assembly work, and when you are using the same tool time and time again, you find out what works,
Most times, what you think is decent probably is! Snap On from the U.S, PB Swiss, and most of the well known German makes like Wiha. Many times though, factories choose what’s readily available. My old firm used Wiha, because their trade supplier kept them.
Totally with you regarding Belzer, they were my Dad’s all time favourite! I still have his, but few others. The handle shape (my all time favourite) was copied by Kamasa in the 80’s, but the blades were not as good!
From my post, the Bahco's I was saying that I liked with the impact-through hexagonal shanks I believe were the old Belzer design multi-component handles. Those aren't the one's you're talking about though, right? Are you both referring to the hard-handled Belzers that looked like this Kamasa screwdriver?