shoggoth80
Well-known member
So,
It struck me today that I am coming up on my two year soon enough at work.
It's interesting reflecting back on things a little, as I muse over tools, brands, origins, and use/abuse.
Most of the stuff I have for my work box is Craftsman, SK, Proto. I have some Gearwrench and Pittsburgh (my own ratchets that I threw into it). I think my Vise Grips are Carlyle? Might be Evercraft. Napa brand either way. Tools at work are issued. Some of it is probably older than I am.
Observations:
I wrench day in, day out. 40 hours a week, sometimes more. I work on everything...little trucks, maintenance vans, 2 tons, 7 tons, trailers, occasionally even tractors (but that's typically swapping out a flat in the field).
I don't baby my tools. I use them, hammer on them, cheater bar, lock wrenches, curse at them. Occasionally I modify them.
What's broke so far:
Craftsman 19mm socket. Broke it on a Caravan lug nut. Removing it, not torquing it.
12mm SK universal socket (12pt). Failed at the joint in a Ford's u-joint bolt. Least I think it was SK... the rest of them are SK.
SK ratcheting wrench 15mm/17mm. Blew the guts out of this on a rusted exhaust bolt. Also on a Ford.
Gearwrench roto-head rat. Stripped the teeth on this one. Again, rusted exhaust bolt on a Ford van. This was in the first couple weeks of getting hired on. Got it warranty swapped. Been kicking since.
IR Butterfly wrench. I broke two of these. Both times it gave out at the swivel Casting is either weak there, or I'm just unlucky. Got a Blue Point now. It works alright.
IR 3/4" gun. This is out for repair. The directional buttons kept falling out. Rocking an older (slower, but really beefy, with a long anvil) IR gun. It's pretty heavy... but it cranks off trailer and tractor lugs like no ones business.
SK 8mm and 13mm sockets. These are probably decades old to start with. My 8mm is starting to get wobbled out a bit. Same with the 13mm. These are very common sizes where I work. Lots of battery, alternator, and starter swaps. Guess that'll do it right?
For what it is worth, I also shattered the guts on 2 Kobalt air tools when I worked places where I had to supply my own. Two 1/2, and one 3/8". I cannot recommend them at all. Lol.
15mm Snap On mid length 3/8" impact. Yeah... it's wearing out. Lots of little GM starter swaps. Also, tool has been around for years before I got hired.
Straightened out a Craftsman punch today. Bent it. Snapped the ends off of a couple others. Filed and reprofiled in case I have to wail on something that hard again.
What hasn't broken (surprisingly)
The Pittsburgh 1/4" roto-head (I like roto-heads). I use the snot out of this thing for a 1/4 drive ratchet. Really good for the...what...$12 it cost?
13mm Pittsburgh impact socket. Can't really put a 13mm through hell. The fasteners just aren't big enough. I didn't have a 13mm in my issued box... so I tossed in a cheap one of mine.
Not a single Proto tool.
That's all I can recall for now. Maybe some folks might find this of value. Maybe some might find it funny. Maybe a couple will know the trials. Lol. Mostly, I'm just rambling.
It struck me today that I am coming up on my two year soon enough at work.
It's interesting reflecting back on things a little, as I muse over tools, brands, origins, and use/abuse.
Most of the stuff I have for my work box is Craftsman, SK, Proto. I have some Gearwrench and Pittsburgh (my own ratchets that I threw into it). I think my Vise Grips are Carlyle? Might be Evercraft. Napa brand either way. Tools at work are issued. Some of it is probably older than I am.
Observations:
I wrench day in, day out. 40 hours a week, sometimes more. I work on everything...little trucks, maintenance vans, 2 tons, 7 tons, trailers, occasionally even tractors (but that's typically swapping out a flat in the field).
I don't baby my tools. I use them, hammer on them, cheater bar, lock wrenches, curse at them. Occasionally I modify them.
What's broke so far:
Craftsman 19mm socket. Broke it on a Caravan lug nut. Removing it, not torquing it.
12mm SK universal socket (12pt). Failed at the joint in a Ford's u-joint bolt. Least I think it was SK... the rest of them are SK.
SK ratcheting wrench 15mm/17mm. Blew the guts out of this on a rusted exhaust bolt. Also on a Ford.
Gearwrench roto-head rat. Stripped the teeth on this one. Again, rusted exhaust bolt on a Ford van. This was in the first couple weeks of getting hired on. Got it warranty swapped. Been kicking since.
IR Butterfly wrench. I broke two of these. Both times it gave out at the swivel Casting is either weak there, or I'm just unlucky. Got a Blue Point now. It works alright.
IR 3/4" gun. This is out for repair. The directional buttons kept falling out. Rocking an older (slower, but really beefy, with a long anvil) IR gun. It's pretty heavy... but it cranks off trailer and tractor lugs like no ones business.
SK 8mm and 13mm sockets. These are probably decades old to start with. My 8mm is starting to get wobbled out a bit. Same with the 13mm. These are very common sizes where I work. Lots of battery, alternator, and starter swaps. Guess that'll do it right?
For what it is worth, I also shattered the guts on 2 Kobalt air tools when I worked places where I had to supply my own. Two 1/2, and one 3/8". I cannot recommend them at all. Lol.
15mm Snap On mid length 3/8" impact. Yeah... it's wearing out. Lots of little GM starter swaps. Also, tool has been around for years before I got hired.
Straightened out a Craftsman punch today. Bent it. Snapped the ends off of a couple others. Filed and reprofiled in case I have to wail on something that hard again.
What hasn't broken (surprisingly)
The Pittsburgh 1/4" roto-head (I like roto-heads). I use the snot out of this thing for a 1/4 drive ratchet. Really good for the...what...$12 it cost?
13mm Pittsburgh impact socket. Can't really put a 13mm through hell. The fasteners just aren't big enough. I didn't have a 13mm in my issued box... so I tossed in a cheap one of mine.
Not a single Proto tool.
That's all I can recall for now. Maybe some folks might find this of value. Maybe some might find it funny. Maybe a couple will know the trials. Lol. Mostly, I'm just rambling.

I still buy my own tools as I like what I like and want to be free to do whatever I want with my tools but, online vendors meet my needs just fine.