To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Torpedo Level Suggestion

Zinc2005

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2014
Messages
101
Location
Michigan
Everyone has been so helpful to me as I have picked out the contents of my new box. I now want to add a small level.

I guess I will use this level... maybe 10 times a year. I instinctively want a Stabila.. but does anyone have another suggestion? Is Stabila worth the price of entry? Thanks!
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

AceofSpad3s

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 1, 2014
Messages
1,808
Everyone has been so helpful to me as I have picked out the contents of my new box. I now want to add a small level.

I guess I will use this level... maybe 10 times a year. I instinctively want a Stabila.. but does anyone have another suggestion? Is Stabila worth the price of entry? Thanks!

I have a stabila and I gotta say it is pretty nice, can certainly take a beating from what mine looks like it went through. I did not get it new, I got it a week ago used for about $1, it was a lot of items so I cannot pinpoint an exact price. For $40 I would not buy one, I am not a pro so I don't need the precision of it. I am no level expert, I just have some generic ones, a johnson long one, the stabila and a old stanley wood on and the stabila is my favorite by a large margin. Since you are going to use it so rarely I would look at this one, http://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky-10...th-Metal-Frame-929H/100324530?N=5yc1vZc1zqZrd. I don't own one but I think it looks nice, it is metal and husky has their lifetime warranty which is nice. I have had good experience with their warranty except when trying to warranty a bit handle since they did not have any in store.
 

justme-

Well-known member
Joined
May 24, 2014
Messages
787
Location
Boston suburbs
FWIW, in a previous career (over a decade ago) I was a manager in a tool retail store. All we sold was tools. I've also used them making a living, so to speak. I have a couple mahogany levels, a "smart level" which was inaccurate from the box, and a couple Stabilia levels. I'll be hard pressed to buy anything but for the rest of my life.
I have seen what a lickin they can take and stay accurate, and the warranty used to be (and I hope still is) exceptional. Made Craftsman warranty look hard - we took back and warrantied (and were credited by the company) for a level backed over by a dump truck and one that a mason had been using for a few years...he somehow cracked a vial. It was so coated in concrete I wasn't sure how it could be used.
I'm looking for another cast magnetic torpedo for my work box for setting man lift level sensors.
 

3rdgen

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
144
Location
London Ont
I got the stabila, in your amazon link and its about the best I've ever used.I also like the klein tools lighted one.
 

DPG

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
473
Location
Western Colorado
Just buy the Stabila. You will never second guess your decision.
 

Attachments

  • stanila.jpg
    stanila.jpg
    3 KB · Views: 310
Last edited:

TomB19

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2015
Messages
547
Location
Regina, SK, Canada
Ok so this: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000OV55FA/?tag=atomicindus08-20

How about 1 cheaper alternative that gets me 80% to a Stabila for 50% of the cost :)

That would be the DeWalt or FatMax (same tool)

31LvbKb2zgL.jpg


http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000FT09DY/?tag=atomicindus08-20
 

fireguy

Well-known member
Joined
May 25, 2008
Messages
530
If you going to use the level on pipe or conduit, make sure the magnet has a groove. and make sure the magnet is rare earth. Otherwise, you will spend lots of time picking the tool off the floor.
 

cheechi

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 29, 2012
Messages
4,384
Location
Triad, NC
I like my Empire torpedo. No groove and it's a strip of ceramic magnet but I have never had issues with pipes.

I like the stabilia, I have some interest in that greenlee, but for a basic torpedo the Empire costs so little I would get it and then decide if you need something better. Usually you can find them packaged with either a speed square or a carpenter's square for like $15.
 

AE2

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2012
Messages
305
Location
Atchison KS
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

zer0cell

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 25, 2010
Messages
1,325
Last edited:

KenC

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 20, 2009
Messages
2,578
My Stanley Fat Max is very solid. I've dropped it several times and it's still dead on.
 

Hpozzuoli

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2013
Messages
3,428
Location
Rhode Island
I use all Empire stuff. I am not into the digital stuff yet, but like everything else I will probably cave in soon. I am a contractor and use mine regularly.
 

lbgradwell

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2007
Messages
4,707
Location
Oakville, ON
On the high end, there is also the Greenlee level. It is intended for electricians but it is a beautiful piece and built like a tank.

I personally think it's appalling that a Taiwanese torpedo level retails for $50.

I hate it when a company tries to deceive the consumer about COO like Greenlee does here by having the "U.S.A." prominently displayed on the tool, but well separated from the "Deisgned". Pure ********. :mad:

Empire for a great value, Stabila for the best...
 

Ign

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 7, 2006
Messages
12,769
Location
Butte Peak ND
TSC has a "Savage", full aluminum, anodized reddish-maroon. They were $30 pre-Christmas & now $15 if your store has any left.

I picked up 2 of the Craftsman Empires when they were $5? last year. Has the magnetic strip, but agreed that it doesn't stay on 1/2" or 3/4" conduit very well. I've also got the gray Stanley Fat Max w rare earth as pictured, but I swear even the fixed vial (one rotates for angles) is not very accurate.
 

Zeke

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 13, 2009
Messages
17,176
Location
Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Today levels are pretty accurate at a low price point due to CNC and automation. Just check a level against a couple of others of known quality and buy what you need.

I won't say I'm a level junkie but I have a 4' Stablila, and old 1' Stanley cast steel unit and one of the first Check Point laser models to come out on the market which I paid over $100 30 years ago. Nothing but trouble with the laser and I gave up on the thing. It's now a 10 dollar level AFAIC.

I also have a couple of wood mason's levels, another old cast AL level by a well known that I can't think of unless I go find it. And I have an 8 footer of questionable quality that serves mostly as a straight edge but it's seen its share of door jambs. Along with a tape, I have gotten by. When I really needed dead nuts, I'd put a better level up to the marginal one and read that.

Lastly, I have a 2' and 3' cheap extruded I level one of which has been modified to adjust wheel camber. Works fine for that. The other one, well, not even sure where it came from, probably a grab box sale at a garage sale. It's light and fine for hanging pictures or using when I set up 3 in different directions to level out a table or washer. the 4 footer just gets in the way a lot of the time but it's the one I check the others against.
 

ecotec

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
5,443
I have 3. I have the Stabila with the 360 degree vial. I have a Klein with earth magnets. I also have a Checkpoint 3D (designed in USA). The Checkpoint is a replacement for a made in USA Checkpoint 3D that I lost while working at a waste water treatment plant.

I have the Stabila in my work tools. It is awesome for bending pipe, it really is.

View media item 47119
 

The Motts

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2009
Messages
67
I personally think it's appalling that a Taiwanese torpedo level retails for $50.

I hate it when a company tries to deceive the consumer about COO like Greenlee does here by having the "U.S.A." prominently displayed on the tool, but well separated from the "Deisgned". Pure ********. :mad:

Empire for a great value, Stabila for the best...

I think Checkpoint makes that Greenlee level.

0300b__36872.1405367114.1280.1280.jpg
 

Mark in Indiana

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 11, 2010
Messages
3,057
Location
Southern Indiana
For general work, I use a Bostitch level. For precise work, I use my Mitutoyo level. Although, it looks like from some of the posts, I will be buying some levels to help me in conduit running.
 

Attachments

  • BOSTITCH LEVEL.jpg
    BOSTITCH LEVEL.jpg
    138 KB · Views: 12
  • MITUTOYO LEVEL.jpg
    MITUTOYO LEVEL.jpg
    139 KB · Views: 15

BeachBoy

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 28, 2010
Messages
540
what is a no dog level? Can't find on google or youtube how to use them???

Edit: this seems to explain:

nodog.jpg


To use the No-Dog, attach it to either end of the conduit as shown in the photo, turn the conduit in the bender until the No-Dog shows level, and bend the conduit. For every additional bend in the same plane, make sure the No-Dog is level before bending.

http://toolmonger.com/2008/08/08/no-doglegs-allowed/

cool tool! Not sure I fully understand hehe
 

FMC1959

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
2,317
Location
Montreal, Canada / Upstate NY
In torpedos I have the Stanley Fatmax pictured previously, as well as an Empire, a Sola, an old B&D and some other el-cheapos. The Fatmax is very nice and works well.

I love the simplicity of levels. To that end, I would recommend torpedos that have a style like the Greenlee, Swanson, Checkpoint and a slew of others. To see if they are maintaining accuracy it takes all of 2 sec of flipping it over and seeing the reading is identical, or not.

If you have a chance to checkout Sola's, they have some of the nicest, easy to read vials I have ever seen.
http://www.sola.us/1824_EN-sola.us-Levels.htm

They are made in Austria and are every bit the quality of Stabila's. In larger levels I have 3 Stabila & 3 Sola, the Stabila are great but usually reach for the Sola.
 

toddoky

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2013
Messages
465
Location
Bowling Green, Kentucky
I have a couple of the levels shown previously but typically resort to just using the Clinometer app on my iphone as it's accuracy (within a tenth of a degree like most all the others) and features (backlight, audible call-outs, included bubble level etc...) are far too convenient to use anything less. I guess the best level to use depends on what you're doing with it. I use mine primarily in a automotive product design capacity, so something else may work better for tasks in a different work environment. The app cost less than $5.
 

ecotec

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
5,443
Beachboy, it is kind of easier to show than explain.

Basically, you put the no-dog on the front of the pipe… level it in the bending shoe with pump pliers. You bend your first bend in your offset. You leave the no-dog on the pipe. You move the pipe to your mark for your second bend in the offset. Then take your pump pliers and rotate the pipe until the no-dog shows level and make your second bend. Since both "rolls" of the pipe in the shoe are opposite of each other… they cancel each other out. Does this make it clear? As I said… it is easier to show than explain.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom