equitiesguy
Banned
My SAE Tools.
My dad's motto is "Better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it." He's got a few of just about everything
SAE sockets. I don't think I've used any of the ones that came in the set's I've bought.
I live by this motto myself. I'd much rather have something when I need it which usually winds up being late in the day or night, holiday, weekend, etc.
I bought a low-speed, high-torque drill to mix thinset when I was tiling my bathroom about 11 years ago. I used it for that job, but never again.


I don’t use those often, but there are a few spots where they are awesome and I’m happy to have them. My snowblower has a couple of bolts with no clearance, not much room to swing the wrench. These have to come out to change the belts, which naturally only burn up at the worst possible time.
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Lol wow...you’ve never worked on anything John Deere then. One of my most used sockets on the farm.I never recall using a 15/16 socket, though i have them in 3/8, 1/2, and 3/4 drive.
MasterCool hydraulic flaring tool, with all the dies. Used it extensively rerunning all new brake lines on an FJ-40, while the drive train was removed. Have not touched it since (going on 5 years now)
Zero offset (flip to reverse) ratcheting wrenches.
Use the **** out of my reversible and my flex (locking and non-locking and stubby) ratcheting wrenches, every day they get used, but have had metric and SAE sets of zero offset ratcheting wrenches for nearly ten years now and most of them have never been used even once. The lack of an offset makes them just too limited in where they can be used. Reversible and flex wrenches can do everything they can and a LOT that they can't.
If I have a small set of SK E-torx wrenches "just in case".