rogersmithiii
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2012
- Messages
- 212
Like 20 mm, 23 mm, 4.5 and 5.5?
My Craftsman sets that I bought skipped these sizes.
Any idea why?
My Craftsman sets that I bought skipped these sizes.
Any idea why?
Seems like 23mm was used when changing 2.2L timing chain.
Isn't 20mm used for some lug nuts?.

Unless you have OCD in filling a socket tray, you'll very likely never see those sizes in fasteners. 9 and 11 also come to mind.
In Europe, 11mm is pretty common a M6 bolt. Both on hardware and European cars.
Unless you have OCD in filling a socket tray, you'll very likely never see those sizes in fasteners. 9 and 11 also come to mind.
Generally, 6mm bolts have a 10mm hex. ISO and DIN both use 10mm.
7mm bolts, which are a ‘non preferred’ size, use an 11mm hex, but they are pretty rare.
There is an old Swedish standard (SMS 1412) which specifies an 11mm hex for a “large” 6mm bolt, but that’s the only one I can think of. That would have been the one on the Saab!
What I hate is when a piece of equipment mixes metric and standard. It's almost as if I have to check four to six sockets to find the best fit. My new Deere backhoe is the worst. Metric, standard, and fifty million bolt and nut sizes, sometimes on the same item.
Unless you have OCD in filling a socket tray, you'll very likely never see those sizes in fasteners. 9 and 11 also come to mind.
That explains the 11mm fasteners on our Saab.
M6 flange nuts are sometimes 11mm.
Flange nuts and bolts are great for lots of things BUT why they decided that the bolt head should "always" be a size smaller than the nut I can't understand.
16mm is probably skipped (Tekton) because it is close to 5/8", but if I were working on VW/Audi, I would still want a16mm.
I've put more than one socket or wrench set back on the shelf or removed it from my online cart when I noticed 12mm and 14mm missing.Skipping 20mm I could understand, but WTF would you skip these?