I have the snap on set. But the sears one seems to be the same kit.I've had the Craftsman kit for many years....looks to be the same as Snap-On....works well.
But with snap on, if you brake or wear out, they have parts available, Sears don't.
But nothing says you couldn't replace broken or worn out parts on your Sears kit with snap on parts.
This is trick question. They are virtually all made by Lang, formerly Kastar. The best place to buy it is where you get the lowest price.
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This is trick question. They are virtually all made by Lang, formerly Kastar. The best place to buy it is where you get the lowest price.
Thread chasers are not the same thing as thread cutters.
The Summit set is Lang/Kastar, too. There are all kinds of combos available.I bought a small set from Summit years ago but I can't find them. There were only like 5 or 6 in the set. They worked great and held up fine. After doing some reading I decided to go with the Craftsman. More are in this set and the reviews are mostly positive.
In a pinch, people have had success taking a hardened bolt ( Grade 8 or metric class 10.9) and cutting a slot or two with a Dremel or other cut off wheel for a DIY thread chaser.
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But with snap on, if you brake or wear out, they have parts available, Sears don't.
But nothing says you couldn't replace broken or worn out parts on your Sears kit with snap on parts.
In a pinch, people have had success taking a hardened bolt ( Grade 8 or metric class 10.9) and cutting a slot or two with a Dremel or other cut off wheel for a DIY thread chaser.
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I wonder how much different those thread chasing taps actually are from a bolt with slots cut in the sides; they look very similar.
In a pinch, people have had success taking a hardened bolt ( Grade 8 or metric class 10.9) and cutting a slot or two with a Dremel or other cut off wheel for a DIY thread chaser.
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Pretty close i'd say. Anything remotely hard or too cruddy and they (Lang) wear out like butter. Ended up getting some nice German made 1/4" drive HSS taps from McMaster for common threads. Never even knew they existed and now they're one of my favorite things in corrosion country. People can squawk if they want about using a tap as a thread chaser but it works just fine. Im trying to make some threads function again so a crusty fastener can go back in and hold on some equally rusted component, not build a space station.
+2. They are all the same set. I have the "Craftsman" branded one, but they are all the same. It's a great tool to have.The Lang/Kastar/Craftsman/Snap-on/Matco set is the best deal. You can usually find the 48pc online for around $50-$55.
Have you tried the Lang dies on Loctite? I'm pretty sure a regular die would cut right through it. What brand are those German taps?
Meant to reply sooner. Völkel makes them.