Pretty much any impact socket stamped Cr-V or Chrome Vanadium should be avoided.
That said, I've only ever broke one Cr-V impact socket and it was a Stanley.
Is there such a thing? Metal too soft? Too thick? I have Wright and Husky, and no name Chinese. All seem the same to me. What are your thoughts fellas.
Is there such a thing? Metal too soft? Too thick? I have Wright and Husky, and no name Chinese. All seem the same to me. What are your thoughts fellas.
The old buffalo impact sockets I bought as a kid in the late 80s are likely the worst set I've seen. About as raw of a tool as there is.

I bought some at Big lots once. Lasted until I put them to work then they split lol

I have a set of S-K impact sockets that I've used for 15 years. Some of them show signs of getting smushed.
The HF ones are annoyingly thick but they will spin your nuts right off
Also bolts
Swivel impacts are something to not totally cheap out on. Regular impacts are whatevers.
I agree. I have some too but ended up buying SO for work because there were tight places that I couldn't fit the HF ones into. So now they are for home use. They work fine when you can use them. Also one of them I don't remember which size, is a little off when compared to the same size from another set. Like it was machined wrong or marked wrong.
CONCUR !Pretty much any impact socket stamped Cr-V or Chrome Vanadium should be avoided.

HF used to sell these !
I find that the square drive on impact sockets wears out first. Pretty soon they are falling off your impact.
I find that the square drive on impact sockets wears out first. Pretty soon they are falling off your impact.
HF Pittsburgh is pretty bad. My Makita cordless impact will split them. No problem, just go get another one.
As we both know Steve Fisher is a quality human being. I always knew this but you're little tale further confirms my belief.Yes, I know because we made 'em
When i started we carried these deep 1/2" impact sockets. I was reviewing inventory and noticed we sold a lot of parts/replacements for how many sets we sold. So I went over them and the broach was not concentric, one wall would be thinner than the opposing side.
And they were rock hard. Like way too hard to be impact sockets. 57 or 59! Hrc, like a good hunting knife or something.
So thin in places.... way too hard... recipe for disaster. I was probably weeks into my position, not even a month, went into the CEO's office and said "we shouldn't be selling these, the quality is poor and probably dangerous"
"Okay, have Jason quarantine them, tell Gary to get them back from our customers and update the system as discontinued and we'll cancel PO's"
It was a sub 1 minute conversation. I knew I was working in the right place after that.