Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Thanks, super. I'm glad you mentioned the strange uni joint in that set. I didn't know if that was a rube goldberg repair or factory!
Few Ko-ken 1/4" ratchets. Watch with 40 mm case to compare the size.
Nice photos of some nice ratchetsIt's helpful to see so many side by side. I noticed you have 2 with the knurled handles. Is that your favorite? I have the knurled 3/8 and have been thinking about trying some of the others.
Did they give a reason for wanting to change out Hazet ratchets?
Porsche mechanics using Ko-ken just seams wrong.![]()
They have two reasons to change out Hazet ratchets. Firstly, because of quality issues. Moreover, I don't know why, but local Hazet distributor doesn't supply the repair kits for ratchets. But I do![]()
Not heard much negative feedback about Hazet before. Do you know if it's just the 1/4" or all sizes they are having issues with?
Silver lining if it brings business your way.![]()
I can see lack of repair kits being an issue for pro use. Sounds like they need to switch distributors!
I would need to check, but I’m pretty certain that some years ago, the Porsche main dealers in the U.K. all used Stahlwille!
Does this kind of spanner fit the kit?If I could interrupt the modern tool reviews for just a moment to sneak in this quick vintage posting..., I picked up this Tona socket set at a flea market this morning.
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It’s 1/2-inch square drive with eleven (11) metric sockets (32, 30, 23, 21, 20, 19, 18, 16, 15, 14, and 13), and what appears to be a spark plug socket with an imperial sizing (7/16”) also marked “BSW” (British Standard Whitworth). It had two HEYCO sockets and one Hazet socket in it, which I have removed.
From this photo of a more or less complete set I grabbed on-line...
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...I believe I am missing the speeder, the short extension, a universal joint, and seven (7) sockets. I’m not much of a metric user, but apparently 31, 22, 17, 12, 11, 10 and 9. All the sockets are 6-point.
The tools are marked “TONA”, flanked by “CHROM” and “VANADIUM”, and “MADE IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA”. I don't believe the finish is chrome-plating. It appears to be cadmium or some other form of economy finish.
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I love the pebbled composite handles and I am having some fun inspecting the strange construction, including the deep broaches and some of the odd marks the process and machine has left behind on the inside, which you just don’t see in US products of similar vintage.
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I am not normally a European tools collector, let alone Eastern Europe, and Eastern Bloc, no less. But there is a bit of a personal connection for me with this set. Tona was founded in 1892, originally as an iron foundry, in what then the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
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Czechoslovakia was formed in 1918, at the end of WWI, a few years after my maternal and paternal grandparents escaped to America. In 1948 it became part o the Warsaw Pact. I am guessing it’s late 1950’s or early 1960’s production. If anyone knows more specifically, or knows a lot more about Tona, please chime in.
I will be creating a WANTED ad for the missing pieces. If anyone has any, please let me know. I understand that it's not a rare or terribly important set, but I am impressed with the quality, which is very good, in my opinion, and I would like to complete it. I may even re-finish the box.
That IS indeed the correct ratchet for the kit!Does this kind of spanner fit the kit?
Maybe. It has a little oil port or access port on the head. In your photo, that is facing down. In my photo, that is facing up. Kiraj's posting of a correct Tona Chrom-Vanadium ratchet has helped me confirm that the ratchet in the set I used as a model is definitely not a Tona Chrom-Vanadium ratchet. It is clearly a replacement and may be a Novosibrisk Tool Plant ratchet, just as you suggest.I carefully examined the posted photo of the instrument. And here I noticed one interesting thing. The design of the same ratchet is actually no different from the instrument of the Novosibirsk Tool Plant. Here is a photo-look and compare yourself.
As far as I know, they have most part of problems with 1/4" and 3/8" ratchets.
I would like to know exactly who is the official distributor of the Hazet tool on Ukraine. Because I used the tool of this brand a little and there is interest to purchase such a tool.
I would like to know exactly who is the official distributor of the Hazet tool on Ukraine. Because I used the tool of this brand a little and there is interest to purchase such a tool.
I am convinced that is the ratchet in the set I used as a photo model of a complete set, Kandyman. But it is not a Tona ratchet. It must have been placed in the Tona set by a previous owner when the Tona ratchet went missing. Kiraj posted the correct Tona ratchet for the set upthread, but it is not for sale. So I am still looking.I took into account your corrections and took a few photos of the ratchet so that you could more accurately compare its design and draw appropriate conclusions. I hope it helps you.

Purchased a Lidl impact. Not tried it yet.
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My logic with power tools is to buy decent where you can. If you’re going to get Chinese, then you might as well get ‘em as cheap as possible, since they seem to be basically all the same!
There are some things (saws and grinders) I’d probably never go cheap on. But cheap drills work remarkably well, so I might give a cheap impact a whirl!
Tape the receipt to the box, work it as hard as you can, and if it fails you get your money back!
I’ve got a Lidl vacuum sealer that’s had a stupid amount of use and works just fine 5 years on!

Interesting pawl.Matador.
Nice indestructible round head coarse-tooths!Rheidco ,Dowidat.
We tried a couple angle grinders about 6 years ago, neither lasted very long, I do see a fair number of Parkside power tools in the dead tool barrel at my local scrap yard though.
The Jigsaw and Reciprocating saw blades are pretty good though and Swiss made.