As someone that uses hammers daily, your thoughts on hammers are entertaining. We consider any hammer with a fiberglass handle or steel shank to be cheap and worthless. Give me a hammer with a properly hung and oriented wooden handle any day. At least if I'm gonna be using it for more than a couple hours a day. Maybe for an electrician you can get away with using them, but for a carpenter or blacksmith, you need a wooden handle.
My foreman has been in the trade for almost 40 years. She showed me the benefits of using the wooden folding rule for most applications instead of a tape. You can use it to find your measurements for rolling offsets, you can use it as a bevel gauge for finding tricky bend angles, you have an easier time getting measurements on a stick of conduit. It's a game changer.
Agreed 6' folding rule, inside read ... but admittedly, a quality 25' tape is a must too. Both are needed, they're different tools. The folding rule isn't the right choice in many situations, however there's layout situations that a wood rule is perfect for. Besides ... it's cool. About the only retro cool tool a JW uses is the classic folding rule.
@@miliniun2056 Fiberglass, nice ... I've never used one. Bought my first 6' wood rule as an apprentice 40yrs ago, spring of '83. White Lufkin ... at some point I bought the thicker Klein, w/the brass slider extension. If I had to choose, I like the thinner Lufkin better.
Most of the time I use my linesman pliers to pound staples. The electrician hammer is also what they’re known as and you can shed some weight in your bags.
8:45 It turns more for each time you turn. Pro tip: There is no change to a screwdriver's handle that exists that makes it turn more per turn. A quarter turn is still a quarter turn. Larger diameter does give you more torque on the screw and better precision.
I saw that, I like the smallest tool that can do the job, Greenlee or Klein, sure but I keep a really small screwdriver in my pouch that can spin a long thread screw much faster
Bigger diameter handle will turn that screw more in a single revolution ,where as the smaller handle may have to be turned half a turn more to spin screw to the same point. Pretty similar to gear ratio. Is it something I'd feel worth arguing about ,absolutely not just seemed you kinda missed what I feel he was referencing. Possibly bigger sprocket on gear or sheave and smaller on axle or tire situation brings it to light. I usually use the screwdriver on my Milwaukee fastback ,I definitely prefer a better 6n1 or 11n1 but I have those craftsman drivers there not junk as others I've had 😮. I don't know as the more revolution of screw with less of handle is a selling point but to some all day handsrewers it may be 😂
Having been a carpenter for 26 years, I've seen and used a couple of different hammers. The wooden handled hammers are nice because of the impact absorption. But if you miss, the handle takes the brunt of the hit. Estwing steel handles have never broken from any abuse I've given them but have no resilience to absorb shock. Best is fiberglass-handled (resilient) for framing and my favorite 16oz finishing hammer is a Stanley with straight claw (of course) and steel-sheathed wooden handle. BTW, some Stillettos are Titanium not Aluminum handled.
Ya, most electricians don't know what a finish hammer is! I don't see myself ever wanting to use a 28 ounce stiletto on a cabinet or a nice piece of trim.
I became a framer over 40 years ago and a B1 for 30 years. I agree A wooden handle is the only way to go. No framer would use an Estwing because the ringing in your fingers would be unbearable at the end of the day. Stilettos are my favorite because you get the force of a 25oz at half the weight. I have bought a few full-tang Titanium hammers and I still prefer wood handles. I think we are the old guys that were pressured by are you a real carpenter? 1) set the nail 2) slam it home 3) OK one more hit to sink it 4) you suck. If you pound a few hundred nails every day you can feel the difference. P.S. If you remember Hart 25oz framing hammers "your as me".
Overall good video. I realize the I'm not really the target audience (in residential construction) but I really have to wonder what his mom was like if a ball-peen hammer was in her kitchen drawer! My mom had a claw hammer like the one he suggested. I work in industrial factory settings so my 24oz wood handled ball-peen is my best buddy. I use it every day, and I would laugh right back at anyone who called it a "mom-hammer". Next most used is my 48oz dead-blow which i use all the time for taking motor shafts and couplings apart. I have a claw hammer too, but in my environment it just collects dust in the bottom of my bottom drawer under all the other hammers. Wood handles are definitely better than steel handles for high impact. I'm just curious how people are breaking them so much. Like I say I use my wood-handled ball-peen every single day on heavy machinery (including for its design purpose of shaping metal) and it's 25 years old, never replaced the handle. Handy for reshaping metal junction boxes after the forklifts run into them too.
I like having those multi use tools. I think it's nice having to take only a few multiuse tools down in the crawl space instead of trying to drag your whole tool bag or crawling in and out just to do a different task. There's always some random junction box you need to access that sometimes has flathead on one side and drywall screw on the other. 11in1 should be your first purchase as an apprentice
My 1960 era Poepeel Jar Opener, has a screw driver, and is indestructable, ...paint can opener, Nut cracker. I got it for a buck at a garage sale in the 80s. MADE IN USA
The other nice thing about magnet tape measures is you can pick up dropped nuts and coupling screws without maneuvering down your ladder or unclipping your harness in a lift... And you can pick up pipe pieces knockouts without bending.
To be fair, your helper who is just starting out, probably isn't cashed up, so they're better off buying 10 different $20 tools, than one $200 tool. Probably for the same reason that the apprentice isn't rolling up to the job in a brand new car/van unlike the journeyman who has earned enough to afford one.
@@davidmurn772 yeah on top of that, the apprentice also needs to worry about showing up with safety boots and work appropriate clothes.... big expense for someone just starting out.. at least if they show up with some kind of tools, they're eager to work and learn.. it's up to you to show them the difference in garbage tools vs good tools..
Right tool for the right job BUT you have to know (and you will learn over time) what tools to spend money on and what tools NOT too. For example. Linesman, or any pliers, spend the money but bastard or rat tail files, that’s harbor freight for me all the way. Anything that I am going to wear out quickly I will NOT spend money on.
I’m a toolahilic and only the ones I find best stay in my bag. It’s gotten to the point where my boss will tell the new kid “if you want to know what tools to buy look in Sean’s bag” 😂😂
Peen hammer is excellent for making gaskets from bulk gasketing material. As an Electrical and Instrumentation technician, I've used a peen far more than I've used a claw. However, your points absolutely stand for construction. Claw angle is frustratingly important. Try pulling a nail in corner against a wall using that aggressive claw angle! Thanks for the tips concerning tapes, levels, and confirmation about magnetic tips. My company has no idea how much time I've exhausted using bits of electrical tape to hold a screw where I can't use both hands, dropped and had to fetch, or puckered as a fastener inadvertently fell into something potentially hot. Check out holding screw drivers! I use those routinely, but the flat-blade holding screw drivers can't hold Phillips/ flat combination heads well, at all. (Those are not meant for loosening or tightening; just starting or removing after the screw is loose -- but fantastically helpful!)
As an electrician: I used a ball hammer for 30 years, and never had a usage for a claw hammer, but then we did not have wood in the factory ether, just steel. So, nails get replaced with bolts. Hammers are used to hit brass punches so we don't mess up the steel, when needed.
I'd agree as well. I carried a ball-pein hammer for an entire career. I believe I went through two, I retired with the second one ... wrapped in thick, protective rubber tape up at the striking end (for those inevitable misses during demo).
My ball-peen is mostly all i use for resi. Light weight cuz you don't need a lot of force to drive staples and easy to get in tight between studs. I's never use those he suggested.. I ain't framing up walls
I felt the same way about the hybrid linesman’s at first but they have saved me a few time really helpful for when making up a box. But would be nice have a tad bit more leverage
I work on boats, mobile marine servic: electrical, systems, & propulsion... Tapes I carry 2 Stanley’s the 16’ and the one in this video. Usually the 16 does it all. I carry 3 ball peens including one that size, and 2 larger ones, I don’t need a claw for anything, but I do have tight spaces and varying levels of tapping punches etc. “don’t hit it with a tiny hammer, you’ll only piss it off”. Cheap screwdrivers rock, maybe not that cheap but I don’t cry when I drop a craftsman into the water from the top of a sailboat mast. Or one gets knocked if the deck into the drink. I do have insulated Kleins as well. But I love a variety of cheap screwdrivers. I’ve got a pair of linesman in each tool bag, they mostly collect dust. I love my small loppers, for doing big battery hookups I do use a ratcheting set. Nothing on a boat is level, get a square and a good eye. Somewhere I do have a solid metal level someplace in the shop. Makita, and magnets are useless if you only work with stainless fasteners. Overall good video, some solid things I agree with!
Great channel, “Loppers” come in great when roughing in MC/BX jobs. Doing the job for over 30years now, and the extra leverage and ease that they cut the armor make life easier instead of pulling out the rotor split IMHOP
This carpenter apprentice brought a beat-up, old Mom's hammer his first day on the job and was ridiculed mercilessly. Before he left at the end of the day, the journeyman told him, "Don't ever show up with that hammer again." So the following day, he came to work with a brand-new Mom's hammer.
🤦🏼♂️ Carpentry has a broad spectrum from framing to setting trim. You don't really what you signed up for till you've been with that crew for a little while. First job was a deck so I bought a 24oz ax handle,but 90% work we do is finish work, so I eventually downsized to 19oz fiberglass Vaughan.
I agree with some of your tool stuff, but I love my multi pliers. I use the knipex 13 72 8 as my strippers, then have a dedicated pair of Klein ironworkers style spring linemans.
I still have my 1970s Klein (steel) 20 oz straight claw hammer. My favorite. I use it all the time. I made the foolish mistake of pounding on one of my Klein multi bit screwdrivers and now it’s almost impossible to change bits. 🥴 The simple 9” Klein lineman’s pliers which I used in my lineman days is still my favorite. No other has proven any better for me. Guess I’m set in my ways after all these years. Excellent video! Keep them coming!
I actually LOVE that pair of Klein multi-tool pliers that you showed. Yes, you are not gonna be cutting 8awg or larger with it, and you definitely won't be cutting MC with it. But working with 12 or 14awg Romex, I absolutely love that thing. 10awg wire is actually too much for it IMO. They should make a second version, for 10awg and larger wire, and with larger screw cutters on it. That's one thing I don't like about it, is that it can only cut #4 and #6 screws.
Agreed dude, Klein Hybrids were my absolute favorite pliers because they're lighter weight than regular linemans but still get the job done on 14-10 awg (10 is a struggle) used them so much I wore them out and had to upgrade to the knipex version for that quality
the Knipex muti pliers are great, the strippers are awesome and the rounded cutting teeth work perfect for BX or single conductor. can easily splice #14 or #12 awg. only wish the jaws were a little wider to splice #10 but its my favorite tool in the bag.
I've had the same Estwing hammer for 44 years. I have used it to demolish buildings, built a variety of things, and just beat the heck out of it. Never once had to worry about it breaking.
I have Milwaukee and Dewalt drills, both are 2 speed. I like the DeWalt much better, Milwaukee is sooooo much slower. They both have similar torque. I first had the Milwaukee for years and thought it was awesome until I bought a Dewalt.
1/0 cutters are not a stupid tool, cut luminaire cable all day w ure linesman’s and ure hands will be ready to fall off, not carrying ratchet cutters around to cut 12/2 mc w 0-10 wire inside of cable while I wire across a building
NOTICE: Dustin is not a tool snob. If you have not been following him for long you will not know that he is not shaming those who may not be able to instantaneously afford good tools. But the fact of the matter is, your tools are your career, and crappy tools can get you hurt. Not to mention, the amount of money you will spend replacing lower tier tools will easily and quickly add up to the value of good tools. Everyone understands that not all have the ability to jump into the trade and have the very best but you should strive to save, work and slowly build up a solid foundation of quality tools as you advance in your career
Also these are not that expensive of tools. The hammer is $40 and the Milwaukee torpedo level is $30ish. Talk to mechanics who have to buy 10s of thousands of dollars on good tools from Matco, snap on, etc, and carry them in a 5k dollar tool chest. And most mechanics are not getting rich. I got that speech from my dad when I was a paramedic about skimping on a stethoscope, the only tool I actually had to buy
my friend was recommended some old "45-year-experienced" "licensed electrician" who is slow, shaky, and has Bauer tools and a brandless LED light. I wonder how someone can work in the most overpaid trade for 45 years and not have good tools at all.
@jlewis1091 I started with Klein tools from the Gate personally because I knew that had a good reputation. Got just basics and each week I'd buy a new tool or kit. Now I'm sitting on about $9k of tools after about 5 years in the business. Had to replace only tools I've lost so far. Nothing broke other than my Milwaukee Hammerdrill I dropped from 60' lol
ELECTRICIANS: Been an electrician for 21 years and an electrical contractor for 12. ANY OTHER TRADES: I paused the video at the beginning to guess what Dustin would explain about why he wouldn't use each one and what he would use instead. AS AN ELECRICAL CONTRACTOR: I own or have owned every tool he recommended.
Ok I know this us about tools..I need help plz..plugged in a wall heater...outlet went out...15 amp breaker...no power coming into the outlet..break in line somewhere before the heater outlet..test continuity..struggling finding this .hummm...do you have videos u can recommend..thx so much
Shortly after I started in this trade my brother gave me one of those automatic wire strippers (fairly expensive Snap-On one), I literally used it for about 15 seconds before I said nope and returned to the normal manual wire strippers.
I actually like those Klein linesman’s for wiring so I don’t have to switch off between pliers and strippers but I do keep a set of regular Klein linesman’s with the longer handle for general use
I like having a couple locking extensions. I lost a really nice spade bid and magnetic extension in a wall cavity. Since then I use locking type if that is a possibility.
So who makes a >good< set of magnetic drill driver tips? I've had several that are too shallow or the magnets are too weak. Also, it's nice to have a mediocre set of tips you don't mind destroying if you're trying to remove rusted or seized screws. No point in destroying the gooder, more expensive set.
I started a college course and got a set of klein pliers including side cutters. They cut through everything like butter but they got stolen. I replaced them with milwaukee’s side cutters cause they were cheaper but now if i cut through anything bigger than # 10 the handles flex and i have to squeeze twice as hard or use a table for extra leverage. Is this a common problem with side cutters or are the milwaukee ones just garbage
The lighted Klein level is nice, but it doesn’t have a 30° level on it, which is not ideal for conduit bending. I carry the 4 level torpedo (small one with a built in no dog) in my tool pouch and the big three level lighted one in my packout hand tote- it’s nice for bending 90s and checking kicks, etc..
@Penguin545 I get what you mean but we don't bend much pipe in my company. We do residential custom homes. The light up one works perfect for my general construction needs.
@@shponjoel absolutely if you’re not bending conduit, then I totally agree, you won’t have much use for a 30° angle if you’re just checking for level and plumb most of the time.
Great video, brother. I'm a former framer so I fully understand the right tool for the task. I don't typically need a torpedo level but I will be keeping the Klein in mind. Just a small correction....yes framers are prima donnas - Stiletto or Martinez are the best hammers out there. (They are Titanium....not Aluminum)
Not a prima donna, and pretty much nobody needs a $250 hammer. Save the Titanium for the hip you might need after hauling lumber around for decades... ;)
When I was in residential I had some use for the claw hammer, but mostly used screws with an impact driver. Now that I'm out of that side of work I have almost no use for a claw hammer, but if I need a hammer a ballpeen is the better choice. Other than that I agree with your assesment.
High voltage metal busses & magnets sound like a lot of fun!! I love my Milwaukee & Klein tools. I own like 12 of Klein's 11in1. Glove box, 2 on the boat, 2 in my tool pouch, and the rest in anyplace I ever wanted a good screw. Even have one at my desk next to the pencil holder. They make great stocking stuffers too! Klein's #2 Phillips tips grip screw heads better than Snap-On, the only other hand tool company worth a ____.
I'm somewhat surprised you didn't mention Klein tape measure. After years of trying Craftsman, Stanley, DeWalt, Milwaukee (and even Kobalt...) I found the Klein. Has all the best features I like, including the magnetic rip, and there really isn't anything I don't like. If I *had* to pick something I don't like, the markings are a bit thick, so if you need super precise, you can't. You can, but you have to consistently mark the left or right edge of the markings or pay close attention. But if my biggest complaint is that I'm going to be 1/64" off and that's not precise enough, I probably need to be using a precise rule instead.
Honestly the best tape measure that I've ever bought was 8 dollars. Better than all those brands, except I haven't tried the klein one. But spec ops on amazon has a great tape measure. Thicker blade than any of the brands mentioned, compact, durable, double sided. Just flawless.
This video is absolutely top notch. This has to be one of the best advise for an electrician. After a year, I’ve literally changed all my tools to the exact tools your showing is the best, and they really are!!!
I love Klein Tools, but I hope you have a shop with reliable warranty turn in. I've warrantied 2 tapes, a level, screwdriver, and jab-saw within this year. It's great when it works, but some of their stuff seems to break too fast in commercial construction.
Great video! I am in almost complete agreement. (especially on the tame measurers) I have to disagree about the wooden hammer though. Well, not entirely. Wooden hammers are better for shock absorption. The reason metal handled hammers advertise special shot absorption features is because they have to because metal handles are notoriously bad on the joints. When I started in construction I bought an estwing but after driving that all day every day I quickly switched to a wooden hammer like the Journeymen around me. Plus, with metal hammers, much of the weight of the hammer is in the handle. So a 16oz metal hammer will have a lighter head than a 16 oz wooden hammer, because in a wooden hammer most of that 16oz is the actual head and not the handle. With a striking instrument you want the weight in the head so gravity can help you do the work. This saves the number of necessary blows and in doing so saves your joints. So if you are driving a lot with your hammer, its a long handle wood hammer all day. I only grab my estwing when I am going to be doing a lot of demolition or something. That said, I can see why a different hammer might fit the work of an electrician differently than a framer. It's interesting to hear how and electrician feels about this!
I love the Klein lineman’s with the strippers and crimpers. I have a normal pair as well, but being able to use one tool as opposed to three when making up boxes is a GAME CHANGER!
Lol, Mom's hammer for me was a 20oz Estwing. For the Klein multi pliers, I know you don't like them, but for someone like me that doesn't need the high leverage in my normal work it ends up being perfect. I do keep some real linesman's in my bag on the rare times I actually need a hammer or to cut something big.
Like your channel, when I moved to the us 2006 started to work as helper, after 6 months, tried Green Lee and I knew that Klein will the best investment. Others convinced me to go with commercial electric and harbor freight 😅
I have the klein version of those milwaukee loppers, and they have uses. Scissor cutting doesn't munge up the end of the wire like linesman pliers or dikes.
When i first started, i showed up with klein strippers and linesman pliers. Still love them, but knipex is where its at. I've since upgraded to all knipex pliers, cobras, and the plier wrenches are second to none.
From personal experience I prefer both the Milwaukee and Klein tapes (I hate how small FatMax feels in the hand). I've warranties both brands twice within the last year of work, with one Milwaukee being my fault for letting it melt next to a space heater. I prefer the Klein for feel, but both are great as long as you stick with the Milwaukee Stud imo. Maybe I don't treat my tapes right, but no brand seems to stand up to much use before being warrantied in my experitence.
I love this channel. Now I say this with no disrespect meant at all. (Disclaimer done) I think it depends on the hands as well for (12:39). I have a pair (Not Milwaukee, sorry big red) and I use them on all size wire. I usually don’t need 2 hands unless it’s truly thick wire and even then it’s not hard at all to cut. For me it isn’t. I’m sure there are others and I’m sure there are people who disagree. Just throwing my 2 cents
About the hammer... I agree with you for the most part, but we work in a lot of tight spaces pretty often, and that long handle and straight claw can make it REALLY frustrating when you're trying to pound or pry and you can't get around an angle iron or something. I have two hammers.
I’ve found I like those cheap molded plastic levels for finish work better. In my experience even just the aluminum edge on plastic levels can scratch or leave marks so I just hand out the less than $3 ones to the new kids. Not like you need a magnet on plastic plates anyway and I can typically get 6 or 7 months out of it so price doesn’t concern me.
thats a fair point, but those plastic levels tend to warp real quick. One dude at a previous jobsite had one of those plastic levels and ended up having to go back and fixing hundreds of faceplates cause his tool wasn't accurate
Even the Klein screwdriver/nutdriver multitool has that rubbery handle that slips. It starts tight, but then begins to loosen and it slips as you're turning it.
That Estwing is a framing hammer, Dustin! That’s why it’s heavier and has a different angle on the claw-it’s for ripping framing nails and breaking steel bands on bundles of lumber. That small claw hammer os a general purpose carpenter’s hammer. I have several hammers but my favorite for carpentry is my titanium Stilleto with a wooden handle. Steel handles are hard on the joints vs. fiber glass and wood. Jason Boland said “Life’s a lot of trade offs in the end.”
Personally I really like the klein multi plier... don't need to switch between a pair of linesman and strippers stream lining most tasks. Never had issue cutting #6 but cutting armored cable thats where a quick swap to your side cutters is easy. The less you have to juggle through tools the better. Only thing missing was a solid fishtape puller but I changed that with a Dremel. Been using them everyday since 2017 and recommend when the opportunity knocks 👌
What brand are the ratcheting cable cutters? A ratcheting PVC tube cutter worked for my project using 2 ga cable in a pinch. Jensen Tools makes amazing magnetic screwdrivers. Good tips about the hammers, level and tape measures.
I use a ball hammer for KO boxes, it's perfect for 3/4" KOs and I don't need to use my Kleins as a hammer. I work commercial, so sometimes when I was in prefab I'd have 500 or more 4x KO boxes; my cheap Harbor Freight ball hammer made it a little easier.
Love your channel, it’s funny though that the majority of your complaints about tools, good ones or bad ones is that some are not good at functions they were never designed for 😂
Those loppers are great for scoring 2” conduit to break. I think that’s the only use I have found for them haha. I got them when I started working for directv and they gave us a bag of tools and held it over our heads for a year (or pay back $600). I never used those until I had to cut conduit where my saw wouldn’t reach.
I disagree on the klein hybrid pliers. This is an amazing tool for any electrical setting. Yea sure I can't beat the living fuck out of something, but its purpose is finesse and practicality. Also, It's really handy when you are putting a lot of stak-ons. If I need to cut bigger wire, I will grab my journeyman klein linesman pliers. Also, if your regular kleins cant cut bigger wire, what do you grab? A CABLE CUTTER. Almost like saying why would you need wire strippers when linesman pliers can do the same thing and act as a hammer? Well, wire strippers are precise when stripping conductors, while linesman pliers run a greater risk of nicking or damaging the conductor when used as a wire stripper. This applies in the situation of using klein hybrid pliers. It's personal preference, but I feel personally attacked. Love the content, keep up the good work.
Great, fun video as always, but I take exception to the hammer comments :) We all LOVE our wooden Stiletto's with a smooth face; I've broken 1 handle in over a decade (took less than 5 minutes to swap it 10 years ago) and they absorb vibration better than anything else out there without a doubt. And the weigh NOTHING yet drive like the bigger framers, usually even better! The only other hammer I love is my Vaughn California framer with a milled face because of its extra length. It's a fiberglass handle, and an awesome prybar. I'd never use a steel hammer again. I do have a Titanium Stilletto milled face as well, but find myself using the wood handle most of the time because of the vibration dampening and the inability to lose it when it drops 25 feet down to the grass; black is hard to locate unless it's snowing ...LOL Nothing but Snap-on screwdrivers here except for a few specialty Wiha ones and a few specialty Klein's. Knipex makes THE best cutting tools for me anyway; the big lineman's are indestructible in over 30 years of VERY hard use, and I NEVER use them as a a hammer ... :) Most of us here have and regularly USE the Klein Multi-tool,, though I have the Knipex version that's similar; it's that perfect tool that you always have with you that does most of what you need when you can't carry everything, but I do wish the Klein was an inch longer too. Guess it depends on how you work; we frame, finish, wire, plumb --- and most of us are electricians by trade and license, but we whatever the job needs to be done. We also work at open height; 20, 50, 100, 200 feet or more very regularly so we we do have to limit what we can carry so I anyway tend to try to keep thing lighter and more versatile, getting a specialty tool only when absolutely needed. Haven't had to replace a single tool from a drop in years unless it got lost in the fall, for me that's the ultimate testament to tool quality on the above companies. Buy great once and never regret it. Thanks again for all of the great videos!
Not being an electrician that would have been my guess. A heavy conductive metal hammer, I would have to have been the last choice for an electrician. 💁🏼♂️
good tools for residential like your saying but industrial mechanical you got to have a little bit of everything big and small i try not to over analyze also multiuse tools get so overcomplicated sometimes
Those Klein hybrids and an 11-1 are my go to tools that I use. Just have to use the hybrids as more of a stripper that can twist wires not as a lineman.
Yes I would not use a ball pean hammer in you trade, but to answer your question, moms hammer are used in the automotive trade. Next time you are getting your truck serviced ask to take a look at the tradesman tool box that keeps your truck on the road. Great content, keep it.
0.5 is way more hilarious, he sounds like most of us do at night after a long hard work day: sloppy drunk talking tools to our only friends who are mainly other electricians.
i do have an 8oz ballpeen in my toolbox for some things, and the curve claw is really nice for taking out nails but yeah I have like 4-5 straight claw steel 16-24oz hammers
Klein torpedo levels are great.. BUT they also drive me crazy. We cut, drill, and work with metal, they get coated and covered with shavings, screws, etc all the time. It's annoying to try and clean out sharp metal shavings from inside and around the bubbles too.
My favorite rule is a folding carpenters stick rule. My favorite tape is an old Stanley 12 foot slide lock tape. I love it because the case is exactly two inches. Makes inside measurements with minimal brain strain. You shouldn't strike a hardened tool with a hardened hammer. Shrapnel may happen. You should have a hammer available made for striking chisels and punches. There is a lot of handled junk on the market masquerading as hammers. I think you have never used a good quality wood handled carpenters hammer. A good one is easy on your arm. If you have to overdrive a hammer, you are using too light a hammer for the job.
Agreed ... 6' (inside read) folding rule. There's scenarios whereby the folding rule is perfect. I think you need both really, tape and a rule. Wood claw hammers; forty years ago as an apprentice, it was recommended to get this Vaughan, oak handled. It was sweet. As it turned out I rarely used it. Actually a large ball pein hammer was clearly more aligned with what I needed in most cases.
Hey Dustin can you please make a video on how a 20 amp receptacle works since there is no neutral and also make a video on how a neutral transformer works. thanks!
On a 20 amp 240 volt receptacle, one side is power and the other is the return, it rotates back and forth with the frequency. They are on opposite poles, L1 and L2. This is rare and the prongs on the receptacle and plug are horizontal instead of vertical. A 20 amp 120 volt receptacle has a neutral, same as the 15 amp receptacle.
As someone that uses hammers daily, your thoughts on hammers are entertaining. We consider any hammer with a fiberglass handle or steel shank to be cheap and worthless. Give me a hammer with a properly hung and oriented wooden handle any day. At least if I'm gonna be using it for more than a couple hours a day. Maybe for an electrician you can get away with using them, but for a carpenter or blacksmith, you need a wooden handle.
My foreman has been in the trade for almost 40 years. She showed me the benefits of using the wooden folding rule for most applications instead of a tape. You can use it to find your measurements for rolling offsets, you can use it as a bevel gauge for finding tricky bend angles, you have an easier time getting measurements on a stick of conduit. It's a game changer.
@@bljdeep She was born that way hoss. Sometimes a woman really is a woman
Agreed
6' folding rule, inside read ... but admittedly, a quality 25' tape is a must too.
Both are needed, they're different tools. The folding rule isn't the right choice in many situations, however there's layout situations that a wood rule is perfect for.
Besides ... it's cool.
About the only retro cool tool a JW uses is the classic folding rule.
Klien makes a fiberglass folding rule that i use all the time. Wooden ones kept breaking on me. Been in 15yrs.
@@miliniun2056
Fiberglass, nice ... I've never used one.
Bought my first 6' wood rule as an apprentice 40yrs ago, spring of '83.
White Lufkin ... at some point I bought the thicker Klein, w/the brass slider extension.
If I had to choose, I like the thinner Lufkin better.
But is it magnetic?
Most of the time I use my linesman pliers to pound staples. The electrician hammer is also what they’re known as and you can shed some weight in your bags.
I used them to hammer everything…🤣 unless I need an actual hammer. Then I probably used my m18 drill like a true professional 🤣
8:45 It turns more for each time you turn.
Pro tip: There is no change to a screwdriver's handle that exists that makes it turn more per turn. A quarter turn is still a quarter turn. Larger diameter does give you more torque on the screw and better precision.
I saw that, I like the smallest tool that can do the job, Greenlee or Klein, sure but I keep a really small screwdriver in my pouch that can spin a long thread screw much faster
Bigger diameter handle will turn that screw more in a single revolution ,where as the smaller handle may have to be turned half a turn more to spin screw to the same point. Pretty similar to gear ratio. Is it something I'd feel worth arguing about ,absolutely not just seemed you kinda missed what I feel he was referencing. Possibly bigger sprocket on gear or sheave and smaller on axle or tire situation brings it to light. I usually use the screwdriver on my Milwaukee fastback ,I definitely prefer a better 6n1 or 11n1 but I have those craftsman drivers there not junk as others I've had 😮. I don't know as the more revolution of screw with less of handle is a selling point but to some all day handsrewers it may be 😂
It actually exists. It's called Wera Kraftform Turbo. One turn of the handle turns the screw four turns
Having been a carpenter for 26 years, I've seen and used a couple of different hammers. The wooden handled hammers are nice because of the impact absorption. But if you miss, the handle takes the brunt of the hit. Estwing steel handles have never broken from any abuse I've given them but have no resilience to absorb shock. Best is fiberglass-handled (resilient) for framing and my favorite 16oz finishing hammer is a Stanley with straight claw (of course) and steel-sheathed wooden handle. BTW, some Stillettos are Titanium not Aluminum handled.
Ya, most electricians don't know what a finish hammer is! I don't see myself ever wanting to use a 28 ounce stiletto on a cabinet or a nice piece of trim.
I became a framer over 40 years ago and a B1 for 30 years. I agree A wooden handle is the only way to go. No framer would use an Estwing because the ringing in your fingers would be unbearable at the end of the day. Stilettos are my favorite because you get the force of a 25oz at half the weight. I have bought a few full-tang Titanium hammers and I still prefer wood handles. I think we are the old guys that were pressured by are you a real carpenter? 1) set the nail 2) slam it home 3) OK one more hit to sink it 4) you suck. If you pound a few hundred nails every day you can feel the difference. P.S. If you remember Hart 25oz framing hammers "your as me".
I use a 16oz straight claw Stanley, I like the length and use it as my measurement for outlet boxes in residential wiring saves time during layout.
Straight claw Stanleys are the shizzle!
Overall good video. I realize the I'm not really the target audience (in residential construction) but I really have to wonder what his mom was like if a ball-peen hammer was in her kitchen drawer! My mom had a claw hammer like the one he suggested. I work in industrial factory settings so my 24oz wood handled ball-peen is my best buddy. I use it every day, and I would laugh right back at anyone who called it a "mom-hammer". Next most used is my 48oz dead-blow which i use all the time for taking motor shafts and couplings apart. I have a claw hammer too, but in my environment it just collects dust in the bottom of my bottom drawer under all the other hammers. Wood handles are definitely better than steel handles for high impact. I'm just curious how people are breaking them so much. Like I say I use my wood-handled ball-peen every single day on heavy machinery (including for its design purpose of shaping metal) and it's 25 years old, never replaced the handle. Handy for reshaping metal junction boxes after the forklifts run into them too.
I like having those multi use tools. I think it's nice having to take only a few multiuse tools down in the crawl space instead of trying to drag your whole tool bag or crawling in and out just to do a different task. There's always some random junction box you need to access that sometimes has flathead on one side and drywall screw on the other. 11in1 should be your first purchase as an apprentice
My 1960 era Poepeel Jar Opener, has a screw driver, and is indestructable, ...paint can opener, Nut cracker. I got it for a buck at a garage sale in the 80s. MADE IN USA
My favorite is the klein 7-1 nut driver. I mainly bought it cause it works on my impact.
@@AyalaMigueliodude same I banged a ko out using it and my lineman’s and the square bit busted out the back of the handle
The other nice thing about magnet tape measures is you can pick up dropped nuts and coupling screws without maneuvering down your ladder or unclipping your harness in a lift... And you can pick up pipe pieces knockouts without bending.
I have used my tape to fish my linesman pliers out of a wall from the attic.
It's so funny when your helper is first starting out and they have so many Mickey mouse tools
To be fair, your helper who is just starting out, probably isn't cashed up, so they're better off buying 10 different $20 tools, than one $200 tool. Probably for the same reason that the apprentice isn't rolling up to the job in a brand new car/van unlike the journeyman who has earned enough to afford one.
@@davidmurn772 oh absolutely dude. That's why I said it's funny not shameful lol
@@davidmurn772 yeah on top of that, the apprentice also needs to worry about showing up with safety boots and work appropriate clothes.... big expense for someone just starting out.. at least if they show up with some kind of tools, they're eager to work and learn.. it's up to you to show them the difference in garbage tools vs good tools..
Right tool for the right job BUT you have to know (and you will learn over time) what tools to spend money on and what tools NOT too. For example. Linesman, or any pliers, spend the money but bastard or rat tail files, that’s harbor freight for me all the way. Anything that I am going to wear out quickly I will NOT spend money on.
@@PawsumGaming safety boots? I'd laugh if my helper showed up with those. Everyone in my company wears shorts and Nikes lol
I’m a toolahilic and only the ones I find best stay in my bag. It’s gotten to the point where my boss will tell the new kid “if you want to know what tools to buy look in Sean’s bag” 😂😂
hopefully you only had tools in your bag that day
What IS in your tool bag?
Wait who the fuck, is Sean? 🤔😜
I Agreed with most of your opinions. The whole video had me smiling. You know how much electricians love talking about our tools. . . 😅
Peen hammer is excellent for making gaskets from bulk gasketing material. As an Electrical and Instrumentation technician, I've used a peen far more than I've used a claw. However, your points absolutely stand for construction. Claw angle is frustratingly important. Try pulling a nail in corner against a wall using that aggressive claw angle!
Thanks for the tips concerning tapes, levels, and confirmation about magnetic tips. My company has no idea how much time I've exhausted using bits of electrical tape to hold a screw where I can't use both hands, dropped and had to fetch, or puckered as a fastener inadvertently fell into something potentially hot.
Check out holding screw drivers! I use those routinely, but the flat-blade holding screw drivers can't hold Phillips/ flat combination heads well, at all. (Those are not meant for loosening or tightening; just starting or removing after the screw is loose -- but fantastically helpful!)
Do not underestimate that ball peen hammer, it is not suitable for electricians but it is every automotive enthusiast's best friend.
I keep one with my paintings and drywall materials. Not my everyday. Great for counter sinking protruding sheetrock nails.
The Klein hybrid linesmen pliers are great for residential and fire alarm work
As an electrician: I used a ball hammer for 30 years, and never had a usage for a claw hammer, but then we did not have wood in the factory ether, just steel. So, nails get replaced with bolts. Hammers are used to hit brass punches so we don't mess up the steel, when needed.
I'd agree as well.
I carried a ball-pein hammer for an entire career.
I believe I went through two, I retired with the second one ... wrapped in thick, protective rubber tape up at the striking end (for those inevitable misses during demo).
I'm a travelling industrial electrician as well and don't have any use for a claw hammer.
Or ful putting a 1/2"/3/4 hole in a block wall ball pins are great. I think this guy is a resy..
Fat tapes and claw hammers are crap in industrial electric. Counter productive. I assume he's talking to residential/commercial installers/repairmen.
My ball-peen is mostly all i use for resi. Light weight cuz you don't need a lot of force to drive staples and easy to get in tight between studs. I's never use those he suggested.. I ain't framing up walls
I felt the same way about the hybrid linesman’s at first but they have saved me a few time really helpful for when making up a box. But would be nice have a tad bit more leverage
@15:06 😆 you sound really upset not being able to drop stuff. Love it.
Good advice...also...cheap socket sets ...they tend to break easy and round over hardware because they aren't sized correctly.
I work on boats, mobile marine servic: electrical, systems, & propulsion...
Tapes I carry 2 Stanley’s the 16’ and the one in this video. Usually the 16 does it all. I carry 3 ball peens including one that size, and 2 larger ones, I don’t need a claw for anything, but I do have tight spaces and varying levels of tapping punches etc. “don’t hit it with a tiny hammer, you’ll only piss it off”. Cheap screwdrivers rock, maybe not that cheap but I don’t cry when I drop a craftsman into the water from the top of a sailboat mast. Or one gets knocked if the deck into the drink. I do have insulated Kleins as well. But I love a variety of cheap screwdrivers. I’ve got a pair of linesman in each tool bag, they mostly collect dust. I love my small loppers, for doing big battery hookups I do use a ratcheting set. Nothing on a boat is level, get a square and a good eye. Somewhere I do have a solid metal level someplace in the shop. Makita, and magnets are useless if you only work with stainless fasteners. Overall good video, some solid things I agree with!
Great channel, “Loppers” come in great when roughing in MC/BX jobs. Doing the job for over 30years now, and the extra leverage and ease that they cut the armor make life easier instead of pulling out the rotor split IMHOP
This carpenter apprentice brought a beat-up, old Mom's hammer his first day on the job and was ridiculed mercilessly. Before he left at the end of the day, the journeyman told him, "Don't ever show up with that hammer again." So the following day, he came to work with a brand-new Mom's hammer.
🤦🏼♂️
Carpentry has a broad spectrum from framing to setting trim. You don't really what you signed up for till you've been with that crew for a little while.
First job was a deck so I bought a 24oz ax handle,but 90% work we do is finish work, so I eventually downsized to 19oz fiberglass Vaughan.
Oh WOW 😳😱
For a minute there, I thought you are Kevin in the USCCA channel....👍😂
I agree with some of your tool stuff, but I love my multi pliers. I use the knipex 13 72 8 as my strippers, then have a dedicated pair of Klein ironworkers style spring linemans.
I still have my 1970s Klein (steel) 20 oz straight claw hammer. My favorite. I use it all the time.
I made the foolish mistake of pounding on one of my Klein multi bit screwdrivers and now it’s almost impossible to change bits. 🥴
The simple 9” Klein lineman’s pliers which I used in my lineman days is still my favorite. No other has proven any better for me. Guess I’m set in my ways after all these years.
Excellent video! Keep them coming!
Klein makes a double-sided tape with the offset measurement for 1/2 EMT bending it is pretty neat
I actually LOVE that pair of Klein multi-tool pliers that you showed. Yes, you are not gonna be cutting 8awg or larger with it, and you definitely won't be cutting MC with it. But working with 12 or 14awg Romex, I absolutely love that thing. 10awg wire is actually too much for it IMO. They should make a second version, for 10awg and larger wire, and with larger screw cutters on it. That's one thing I don't like about it, is that it can only cut #4 and #6 screws.
Klein makes the same hybrid pliers in a 9” version. The 8” just seems to be more commonly available
Klein Tools Hybrid Pliers with Crimper, Fish Tape Puller and Wire Stripper, Model J2159CRTP*
Agreed dude, Klein Hybrids were my absolute favorite pliers because they're lighter weight than regular linemans but still get the job done on 14-10 awg (10 is a struggle) used them so much I wore them out and had to upgrade to the knipex version for that quality
@@stanrosenblum4669 thanks for the tip. I may snag those 9" up soon.
I have the 9 inch pliers awesome pliers
the Knipex muti pliers are great, the strippers are awesome and the rounded cutting teeth work perfect for BX or single conductor. can easily splice #14 or #12 awg. only wish the jaws were a little wider to splice #10 but its my favorite tool in the bag.
The best.
I've had the same Estwing hammer for 44 years. I have used it to demolish buildings, built a variety of things, and just beat the heck out of it. Never once had to worry about it breaking.
I have Milwaukee and Dewalt drills, both are 2 speed. I like the DeWalt much better, Milwaukee is sooooo much slower.
They both have similar torque.
I first had the Milwaukee for years and thought it was awesome until I bought a Dewalt.
The ball hammer we use it everyday on my job sight - it’s good to break races on out shaft
1/0 cutters are not a stupid tool, cut luminaire cable all day w ure linesman’s and ure hands will be ready to fall off, not carrying ratchet cutters around to cut 12/2 mc w 0-10 wire inside of cable while I wire across a building
Best part of the Estwing is that thin shaft. Perfect to wedge nail up boxes in narrow spaces.
You can stick a flat pry on the nail then hit the pry bar for tight spaces.
NOTICE: Dustin is not a tool snob. If you have not been following him for long you will not know that he is not shaming those who may not be able to instantaneously afford good tools. But the fact of the matter is, your tools are your career, and crappy tools can get you hurt. Not to mention, the amount of money you will spend replacing lower tier tools will easily and quickly add up to the value of good tools. Everyone understands that not all have the ability to jump into the trade and have the very best but you should strive to save, work and slowly build up a solid foundation of quality tools as you advance in your career
Also these are not that expensive of tools. The hammer is $40 and the Milwaukee torpedo level is $30ish. Talk to mechanics who have to buy 10s of thousands of dollars on good tools from Matco, snap on, etc, and carry them in a 5k dollar tool chest. And most mechanics are not getting rich. I got that speech from my dad when I was a paramedic about skimping on a stethoscope, the only tool I actually had to buy
my friend was recommended some old "45-year-experienced" "licensed electrician" who is slow, shaky, and has Bauer tools and a brandless LED light. I wonder how someone can work in the most overpaid trade for 45 years and not have good tools at all.
@@mrniusi11 lol "licensed" 😆
@jlewis1091 I started with Klein tools from the Gate personally because I knew that had a good reputation. Got just basics and each week I'd buy a new tool or kit. Now I'm sitting on about $9k of tools after about 5 years in the business. Had to replace only tools I've lost so far. Nothing broke other than my Milwaukee Hammerdrill I dropped from 60' lol
I've had coworkers break two of my Milwaukee hammer drills on one jobsite. It still pisses me off.@@mattdiehl83
Been an electrician since 2004... involuntary nodding the WHOLE video, great stuff and experienced thoughts!
ELECTRICIANS:
Been an electrician for 21 years and an electrical contractor for 12.
ANY OTHER TRADES:
I paused the video at the beginning to guess what Dustin would explain about why he wouldn't use each one and what he would use instead.
AS AN ELECRICAL CONTRACTOR:
I own or have owned every tool he recommended.
The ball piece works great for knocking out knock outs, I keep a little one on my tool bag very useful.
Ok
I know this us about tools..I need help plz..plugged in a wall heater...outlet went out...15 amp breaker...no power coming into the outlet..break in line somewhere before the heater outlet..test continuity..struggling finding this
.hummm...do you have videos u can recommend..thx so much
No videos?
ideal screwdrivers are pretty nice. my kleins have loose rubber handles like you mentioned.
Shortly after I started in this trade my brother gave me one of those automatic wire strippers (fairly expensive Snap-On one), I literally used it for about 15 seconds before I said nope and returned to the normal manual wire strippers.
Those automatic wire strippers are great if you’re building a PLC cabinet and need to terminate 1,000 small wires.
I love my 6' rule. You can match bends when needed.
I actually like those Klein linesman’s for wiring so I don’t have to switch off between pliers and strippers but I do keep a set of regular Klein linesman’s with the longer handle for general use
I like having a couple locking extensions. I lost a really nice spade bid and magnetic extension in a wall cavity. Since then I use locking type if that is a possibility.
So who makes a >good< set of magnetic drill driver tips? I've had several that are too shallow or the magnets are too weak. Also, it's nice to have a mediocre set of tips you don't mind destroying if you're trying to remove rusted or seized screws. No point in destroying the gooder, more expensive set.
I started a college course and got a set of klein pliers including side cutters. They cut through everything like butter but they got stolen. I replaced them with milwaukee’s side cutters cause they were cheaper but now if i cut through anything bigger than # 10 the handles flex and i have to squeeze twice as hard or use a table for extra leverage. Is this a common problem with side cutters or are the milwaukee ones just garbage
Q1
If you're gonna get that Klein level, then get the one that lights up. Makes leveling stuff in darker areas easier.
The lighted Klein level is nice, but it doesn’t have a 30° level on it, which is not ideal for conduit bending. I carry the 4 level torpedo (small one with a built in no dog) in my tool pouch and the big three level lighted one in my packout hand tote- it’s nice for bending 90s and checking kicks, etc..
@Penguin545 I get what you mean but we don't bend much pipe in my company. We do residential custom homes. The light up one works perfect for my general construction needs.
@@shponjoel absolutely if you’re not bending conduit, then I totally agree, you won’t have much use for a 30° angle if you’re just checking for level and plumb most of the time.
I love the Klein multi tool pliers. I use it exclusively when I device out, do low voltage etc.
Great video, brother.
I'm a former framer so I fully understand the right tool for the task.
I don't typically need a torpedo level but I will be keeping the Klein in mind.
Just a small correction....yes framers are prima donnas - Stiletto or Martinez are the best hammers out there. (They are Titanium....not Aluminum)
Framers are drug addicts not primadonas. Sparkies are the primadonas because we are better than the other trades, especially carpenters.
@@alexpopescu7312 learn how to use a broom and we'll talk
@@jacobrutherford2407 ok tweaker
Not a prima donna, and pretty much nobody needs a $250 hammer. Save the Titanium for the hip you might need after hauling lumber around for decades... ;)
I absolutely love that pliers, the best multi purpose pliers. I use wire cutter for bigger cables.
That cut to Dustin's awkward straight face laugh had me spit my drink out all over my monitor.....twice. Well played.
When I was in residential I had some use for the claw hammer, but mostly used screws with an impact driver. Now that I'm out of that side of work I have almost no use for a claw hammer, but if I need a hammer a ballpeen is the better choice. Other than that I agree with your assesment.
Can you refill the klein level with bubble fluid? Co-workers always gone off for more bubble fluid.
High voltage metal busses & magnets sound like a lot of fun!! I love my Milwaukee & Klein tools. I own like 12 of Klein's 11in1. Glove box, 2 on the boat, 2 in my tool pouch, and the rest in anyplace I ever wanted a good screw. Even have one at my desk next to the pencil holder. They make great stocking stuffers too! Klein's #2 Phillips tips grip screw heads better than Snap-On, the only other hand tool company worth a ____.
I'm somewhat surprised you didn't mention Klein tape measure. After years of trying Craftsman, Stanley, DeWalt, Milwaukee (and even Kobalt...) I found the Klein. Has all the best features I like, including the magnetic rip, and there really isn't anything I don't like. If I *had* to pick something I don't like, the markings are a bit thick, so if you need super precise, you can't. You can, but you have to consistently mark the left or right edge of the markings or pay close attention. But if my biggest complaint is that I'm going to be 1/64" off and that's not precise enough, I probably need to be using a precise rule instead.
Agree and if u forget the measurements for bends on conduit it's on the tape measure
Honestly the best tape measure that I've ever bought was 8 dollars.
Better than all those brands, except I haven't tried the klein one. But spec ops on amazon has a great tape measure. Thicker blade than any of the brands mentioned, compact, durable, double sided. Just flawless.
This video is absolutely top notch. This has to be one of the best advise for an electrician. After a year, I’ve literally changed all my tools to the exact tools your showing is the best, and they really are!!!
I love Klein Tools, but I hope you have a shop with reliable warranty turn in. I've warrantied 2 tapes, a level, screwdriver, and jab-saw within this year. It's great when it works, but some of their stuff seems to break too fast in commercial construction.
@@isaiahserrano6116 really? May have just been bad luck. I’ve never ever had to warranty anything.
The only thing I use my lineman’s for is a hammer lol. Could somebody tell me what the actual purpose of them is? Serious question btw
Great video! I am in almost complete agreement. (especially on the tame measurers) I have to disagree about the wooden hammer though. Well, not entirely. Wooden hammers are better for shock absorption. The reason metal handled hammers advertise special shot absorption features is because they have to because metal handles are notoriously bad on the joints. When I started in construction I bought an estwing but after driving that all day every day I quickly switched to a wooden hammer like the Journeymen around me. Plus, with metal hammers, much of the weight of the hammer is in the handle. So a 16oz metal hammer will have a lighter head than a 16 oz wooden hammer, because in a wooden hammer most of that 16oz is the actual head and not the handle. With a striking instrument you want the weight in the head so gravity can help you do the work. This saves the number of necessary blows and in doing so saves your joints. So if you are driving a lot with your hammer, its a long handle wood hammer all day. I only grab my estwing when I am going to be doing a lot of demolition or something. That said, I can see why a different hammer might fit the work of an electrician differently than a framer. It's interesting to hear how and electrician feels about this!
I love the Klein lineman’s with the strippers and crimpers. I have a normal pair as well, but being able to use one tool as opposed to three when making up boxes is a GAME CHANGER!
Love to see you cut some 12/6 with lineman. Those clippers are great for bigger sized mc
my kelin level has a messd up tube that slides back and forth just a bit. They are just glued in.
Lol, Mom's hammer for me was a 20oz Estwing. For the Klein multi pliers, I know you don't like them, but for someone like me that doesn't need the high leverage in my normal work it ends up being perfect. I do keep some real linesman's in my bag on the rare times I actually need a hammer or to cut something big.
Like your channel, when I moved to the us 2006 started to work as helper, after 6 months, tried Green Lee and I knew that Klein will the best investment. Others convinced me to go with commercial electric and harbor freight 😅
I have the klein version of those milwaukee loppers, and they have uses. Scissor cutting doesn't munge up the end of the wire like linesman pliers or dikes.
I’m on my last week of trade school and I’m not sure if I should just go for the state license or go into union what do you recommend
17:12
Magnetic bits are great, until they get filled up with little metal junk.😣
Hard to get them all out.
When i first started, i showed up with klein strippers and linesman pliers. Still love them, but knipex is where its at. I've since upgraded to all knipex pliers, cobras, and the plier wrenches are second to none.
From personal experience I prefer both the Milwaukee and Klein tapes (I hate how small FatMax feels in the hand). I've warranties both brands twice within the last year of work, with one Milwaukee being my fault for letting it melt next to a space heater. I prefer the Klein for feel, but both are great as long as you stick with the Milwaukee Stud imo. Maybe I don't treat my tapes right, but no brand seems to stand up to much use before being warrantied in my experitence.
I love this channel. Now I say this with no disrespect meant at all. (Disclaimer done) I think it depends on the hands as well for (12:39). I have a pair
(Not Milwaukee, sorry big red) and I use them on all size wire. I usually don’t need 2 hands unless it’s truly thick wire and even then it’s not hard at all to cut. For me it isn’t. I’m sure there are others and I’m sure there are people who disagree. Just throwing my 2 cents
About the hammer... I agree with you for the most part, but we work in a lot of tight spaces pretty often, and that long handle and straight claw can make it REALLY frustrating when you're trying to pound or pry and you can't get around an angle iron or something. I have two hammers.
I’ve found I like those cheap molded plastic levels for finish work better. In my experience even just the aluminum edge on plastic levels can scratch or leave marks so I just hand out the less than $3 ones to the new kids. Not like you need a magnet on plastic plates anyway and I can typically get 6 or 7 months out of it so price doesn’t concern me.
thats a fair point, but those plastic levels tend to warp real quick. One dude at a previous jobsite had one of those plastic levels and ended up having to go back and fixing hundreds of faceplates cause his tool wasn't accurate
Hey, Electrician U, you should gives us a tour of all your Electrical Books.
Love my Milwaukee hickory framing hammer ❤️
Even the Klein screwdriver/nutdriver multitool has that rubbery handle that slips. It starts tight, but then begins to loosen and it slips as you're turning it.
That Estwing is a framing hammer, Dustin! That’s why it’s heavier and has a different angle on the claw-it’s for ripping framing nails and breaking steel bands on bundles of lumber. That small claw hammer os a general purpose carpenter’s hammer. I have several hammers but my favorite for carpentry is my titanium Stilleto with a wooden handle. Steel handles are hard on the joints vs. fiber glass and wood. Jason Boland said “Life’s a lot of trade offs in the end.”
i like rulers that stay open by themselves but the stanley ones that are most common the number wear off quickly.
Personally I really like the klein multi plier... don't need to switch between a pair of linesman and strippers stream lining most tasks. Never had issue cutting #6 but cutting armored cable thats where a quick swap to your side cutters is easy. The less you have to juggle through tools the better. Only thing missing was a solid fishtape puller but I changed that with a Dremel. Been using them everyday since 2017 and recommend when the opportunity knocks 👌
What brand are the ratcheting cable cutters?
A ratcheting PVC tube cutter worked for my project using 2 ga cable in a pinch.
Jensen Tools makes amazing magnetic screwdrivers.
Good tips about the hammers, level and tape measures.
Im all for buy once, cry once. But I lose too many tools to only buy Klein lol
Anyone know of a bit holder that wraps around the drill handle?
Klein makes a new 9” hybrid linemen’s that I just got and love. Same cutting size as regular 9”
I use a ball hammer for KO boxes, it's perfect for 3/4" KOs and I don't need to use my Kleins as a hammer. I work commercial, so sometimes when I was in prefab I'd have 500 or more 4x KO boxes; my cheap Harbor Freight ball hammer made it a little easier.
Really like your enthusiasm. You do a great job & even though learning so much, you keep it light. Learned a lot thanks
Love your channel, it’s funny though that the majority of your complaints about tools, good ones or bad ones is that some are not good at functions they were never designed for 😂
Great video. The stilleto hammer is titanium, not aluminum. Expensive, but a great hammer.
I carry ball ping and use it quite a bit. They bend and shape very well and the come in a pinch when you dont have room for a claw hammer
Those loppers are great for scoring 2” conduit to break. I think that’s the only use I have found for them haha. I got them when I started working for directv and they gave us a bag of tools and held it over our heads for a year (or pay back $600). I never used those until I had to cut conduit where my saw wouldn’t reach.
I disagree on the klein hybrid pliers. This is an amazing tool for any electrical setting. Yea sure I can't beat the living fuck out of something, but its purpose is finesse and practicality. Also, It's really handy when you are putting a lot of stak-ons. If I need to cut bigger wire, I will grab my journeyman klein linesman pliers. Also, if your regular kleins cant cut bigger wire, what do you grab? A CABLE CUTTER.
Almost like saying why would you need wire strippers when linesman pliers can do the same thing and act as a hammer? Well, wire strippers are precise when stripping conductors, while linesman pliers run a greater risk of nicking or damaging the conductor when used as a wire stripper. This applies in the situation of using klein hybrid pliers. It's personal preference, but I feel personally attacked. Love the content, keep up the good work.
Great, fun video as always, but I take exception to the hammer comments :) We all LOVE our wooden Stiletto's with a smooth face; I've broken 1 handle in over a decade (took less than 5 minutes to swap it 10 years ago) and they absorb vibration better than anything else out there without a doubt. And the weigh NOTHING yet drive like the bigger framers, usually even better! The only other hammer I love is my Vaughn California framer with a milled face because of its extra length. It's a fiberglass handle, and an awesome prybar. I'd never use a steel hammer again. I do have a Titanium Stilletto milled face as well, but find myself using the wood handle most of the time because of the vibration dampening and the inability to lose it when it drops 25 feet down to the grass; black is hard to locate unless it's snowing ...LOL Nothing but Snap-on screwdrivers here except for a few specialty Wiha ones and a few specialty Klein's. Knipex makes THE best cutting tools for me anyway; the big lineman's are indestructible in over 30 years of VERY hard use, and I NEVER use them as a a hammer ... :) Most of us here have and regularly USE the Klein Multi-tool,, though I have the Knipex version that's similar; it's that perfect tool that you always have with you that does most of what you need when you can't carry everything, but I do wish the Klein was an inch longer too. Guess it depends on how you work; we frame, finish, wire, plumb --- and most of us are electricians by trade and license, but we whatever the job needs to be done. We also work at open height; 20, 50, 100, 200 feet or more very regularly so we we do have to limit what we can carry so I anyway tend to try to keep thing lighter and more versatile, getting a specialty tool only when absolutely needed. Haven't had to replace a single tool from a drop in years unless it got lost in the fall, for me that's the ultimate testament to tool quality on the above companies. Buy great once and never regret it. Thanks again for all of the great videos!
What do you suggest for quick bx cutting?
As an apprentice sparky I was always told to use a wooden or fiberglass hammer presumably because it doesn't conduct the juice.
Not being an electrician that would have been my guess. A heavy conductive metal hammer, I would have to have been the last choice for an electrician. 💁🏼♂️
good tools for residential like your saying but industrial mechanical you got to have a little bit of everything big and small i try not to over analyze also multiuse tools get so overcomplicated sometimes
The non-magnetic bit is most likely for nuts on bolts, like motors and the such.
Those Klein hybrids and an 11-1 are my go to tools that I use. Just have to use the hybrids as more of a stripper that can twist wires not as a lineman.
I do like those cheap levels for doing tile work, keeps my nice levels from getting covered in mortar.
Yes I would not use a ball pean hammer in you trade, but to answer your question, moms hammer are used in the automotive trade. Next time you are getting your truck serviced ask to take a look at the tradesman tool box that keeps your truck on the road. Great content, keep it.
Klein has actually made a larger version (9”)of those multi use linemans pliers. I think the ones in the video are 8”.
If you want a whole new level of Dustin being super excited and engaging, watch these videos at 1.5. Hilarity ensues.
0.5 is way more hilarious, he sounds like most of us do at night after a long hard work day: sloppy drunk talking tools to our only friends who are mainly other electricians.
i do have an 8oz ballpeen in my toolbox for some things, and the curve claw is really nice for taking out nails but yeah I have like 4-5 straight claw steel 16-24oz hammers
Is that a 3 phase ammeter from an old power plant on the bench behind your right shoulder? Brings back memories
Klein torpedo levels are great.. BUT they also drive me crazy. We cut, drill, and work with metal, they get coated and covered with shavings, screws, etc all the time. It's annoying to try and clean out sharp metal shavings from inside and around the bubbles too.
For every situation where a metal handle would be better than wooden, I’ve found I’m either bending the handle or breaking what I’m working on.
My favorite rule is a folding carpenters stick rule. My favorite tape is an old Stanley 12 foot slide lock tape. I love it because the case is exactly two inches. Makes inside measurements with minimal brain strain.
You shouldn't strike a hardened tool with a hardened hammer. Shrapnel may happen. You should have a hammer available made for striking chisels and punches.
There is a lot of handled junk on the market masquerading as hammers. I think you have never used a good quality wood handled carpenters hammer. A good one is easy on your arm. If you have to overdrive a hammer, you are using too light a hammer for the job.
Agreed ... 6' (inside read) folding rule. There's scenarios whereby the folding rule is perfect.
I think you need both really, tape and a rule.
Wood claw hammers; forty years ago as an apprentice, it was recommended to get this Vaughan, oak handled.
It was sweet.
As it turned out I rarely used it. Actually a large ball pein hammer was clearly more aligned with what I needed in most cases.
Hey Dustin can you please make a video on how a 20 amp receptacle works since there is no neutral and also make a video on how a neutral transformer works. thanks!
On a 20 amp 240 volt receptacle, one side is power and the other is the return, it rotates back and forth with the frequency. They are on opposite poles, L1 and L2. This is rare and the prongs on the receptacle and plug are horizontal instead of vertical. A 20 amp 120 volt receptacle has a neutral, same as the 15 amp receptacle.