I bought my Wright Grip 2.0 only a couple years ago and dang I wish I'd have known about Wright long ago.Wright Grip baby! I was glad to see the video and see they were still on top, tied with proto for maxing out the rig.
I found some close up shots of the MAC RBRT wrenches:Looking at a mac wrench it hints of forging as can see slight deforming around the large lettering .
I quite agree the design is made be somewhat universal but I can't see major advantage in running one die and adding additional production steps when they got production number limits before die worn out .




explainI'm very confident they letters are milled on.
I have cheap impacts that are stamped, I think. I'd assume lasering would look better. I figure they're probably roll stamped.There used to be a snap-on wall art piece, with all the steps of forging. It clearly shows that the business ends are finals-sized by being "cold broached" after forging. This general step of being cold-worked aslo includes the stamping of the sizes.
The broaching and stamping step needs tooling and setup time that cost money. For cheap tools, they skip the mechanical stamping of sizes. This is why all those cheap impacts are only laser-etched.
Presumably the quality of the broaching tools is up to each end user/brand...and you can cut corners if you wish here. Heat treat is also done at this stage, and again, can be done to spec for each brand.
![]()
I bought my Wright Grip 2.0 only a couple years ago and dang I wish I'd have known about Wright long ago.
Heck of a deal on Amazon too.
My only gripe is why skip 16mm and 18mm? My honda has 18mm all over. I had to order the two sizes separately to complete the set.

