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Why aren't dog bone wrenches popular nowadays?

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redragoon

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Jun 12, 2018
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Greenville SC
Dogbone wrenches have no use for working on cars or anything that requires serious torque.

However, they are fantastic to keep by my table saw and grinder. I use them to loosen and tighten the various sized bolts on the tool rests and saw adjustments. These don't need to be torqued into place, and I'd rather not have several wrenches laying around out of the toolbox.
 

subroc

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Apr 22, 2017
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781
Location
Dover, NH
Because they ****. While working you put it down for a sec, then you are in the process of finding your size again.

I just try to use the right tool for the job.

At 66 years, my experience is that tools that try to do many things do none of them well.

YMMV
 

M6erfan

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Dec 6, 2014
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'Merica!
Were they ever 'popular'? At least with people that are actually familiar with tools?
 

BlakeTheCarGuy

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Oct 10, 2018
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Roanoke Virginia
I got one branded Tiger Wrench as seen on tv for Christmas one year. I threw it in the truck box and don’t think I’ve touched it. And it’s 12 point so it’s pretty much guaranteed to round off stuff especially drain plugs and such. I can’t say I’ve ever seen one being used either.
 

RTM

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May 13, 2019
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SF Bay Area
While working you put it down for a sec, then you are in the process of finding your size again.
I have one tool that is similar, an angle finder for sharpening. I have color coded the preferred size (30°) with a red sharpie, so I can find it fast, rather than get it into good enough light to read the sizes. Saw others do it with common close sized tools, red blue green, for goldilocks things.
 
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bobg03

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Aug 29, 2020
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conway sc
As a kid in the 60's they were great for a bicycle, coupled with a small 4" adjustable and a keychain screwdriver from Stanley that had a regular flat head and half of the phillips on the other end to adjust cables and deraileurs one could effect most roadside repairs.
 
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Al Borland

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Jan 20, 2016
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one of the Epsilons* that my office sends out has one in his toolbag. It's fun to watch him struggle with it. That's why I got it for him.


* See "Brave New World."
 

AJHD

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Joined
Jan 4, 2020
Messages
3,021
Location
AZ
Why were they EVER popular? Makes no sense to me. It's a gimmick. We had them on the oil change carts at the first shop I worked at as a lube tech. Never used or touched them. I refused.

I just don't get the point. Even the cheapest HF wrench set is better and likely cheaper too.

Leatherman style multi-tools aside... Tools that designed to be multi-purpose rarely excel (or are even good) at a single one of their intended uses/purposes. And even Leatherman style multi-tools have their faults and limitations.

/ End rant
 

ARFLY

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Jul 28, 2013
Messages
848
Location
NW Arkansas
Yep they were a gimmick. Craftsman even had the ratcheting dog bone wrench. Now that was something!
 

demarpaint

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Sep 17, 2010
Messages
1,237
Location
Long Island
As a kid I recall tightening a wheel on a bike and snapping a dog bone wrench. The garbage metal broke nice and clean. A POS summed up the wrench nicely.
 

Draftpick1

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Mar 22, 2018
Messages
326
Not a true dog bone but gear wrench quad box has served me well in low to medium torque uses. Like others have said they are short and don’t have a lot of leverage and not ideal in tight conditions, but the quad box is useful and more compact vs the c-man dogbone. I thought It was gimmicky till I used on that saved me a trip down a long latter, good if you forgot a wrench or need a second one, dropped one etc, you can’t have everything with you at all times and don’t always have a big tool box a couple feet away at all times.
 

Corndoggeh

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Apr 2, 2016
Messages
1,198
I keep this handy tool hanging on the wall in my shop, just in case...

I'm not sure if that is Japanese, or Chinese writing on the package, but it came from the "100 Yen store" in Japan about 15 years ago.

It has a little bit of a dog bone shape to it.

:lol:

attachment.php
The writing is Japanese. Japanese has a lot of curves and a brush look to it. Chinese is very sharp and jagged with almost no curves and Korean seems to have a mix of both.
 

Ton ton

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Oct 16, 2019
Messages
4,592
Location
Page County,VA
Not a true dog bone but gear wrench quad box has served me well in low to medium torque uses. Like others have said they are short and don’t have a lot of leverage and not ideal in tight conditions, but the quad box is useful and more compact vs the c-man dogbone. I thought It was gimmicky till I used on that saved me a trip down a long latter, good if you forgot a wrench or need a second one, dropped one etc, you can’t have everything with you at all times and don’t always have a big tool box a couple feet away at all times.
I like those quad box wrenches.
 

ARFLY

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Jul 28, 2013
Messages
848
Location
NW Arkansas
Here are some Craftsman dog bone wrenches and a couple that are in the same category. There is a universal dog bone and the ratcheting dog bones in metric and SAE. The universal figure eight wrenches are basically dog bones as are the Craftsman universal flip wrenches.
 

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Mallen

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Aug 11, 2021
Messages
649
Problem with this is the leverage. Dog bone wrenches are only ~10". Oil plugs and oil filter housings are often fairly [over]tight. Most drain plugs also have torque specs of around 20ish foot pounds. You can use it for LOFs but a ratchet and a handful of sockets on a rail is more practical.
I see that as an advantage when tightening them.
 
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