Tool Quiz! Test Your Tool Knowledge vs the Tool Bear!
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- Опубликовано: 7 авг 2019
- Tool Quiz! Test Your Tool Knowledge vs the Tool Bear!
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"All tools have a hammer side." - Eric O.
Collorary; "Some tools have a prybar side."
Hex is correct, allen is a brand name
So is Torx, but we'll let it slide this time. :)
@@brotherbrian1 star bit is new generic name
It’s called a socket head
Yes you are correct
Amen yall,, the Bear is not doing well in this quiz
There are square drive bits and Robertson bits.... they are not the same.
The Robertson bits have a slight taper, as your pic, and are labeled R0, R1, R2...etc.
The square drive bits have no taper, and are labeled S0, S1, S2...etc.
I have both, and the Robertsons are superior for most screws.
Now... how about the JIS/Phillips? 😀
A couple of funny stories about brand vs. generic names. In the 1960's the American microphone manufacturer Electro-Voice wanted to export to Europe, and so filed for a trademark in what was then the Common Market, now the European Union. They were refused the trademark as being "merely descriptive", much as no one can claim "refrigerator" as an exclusive trademark. Electro-Voice was so incensed they rebranded for Europe as "Electro-Finger" (guess which finger!) and set up their European distribution office in Switzerland, not then a member of the Common Market and not now a member of the European Union. After protracted litigation they were allowed to trademark Electro-Voice. Here's another. In the 1990's the Oxford English dictionary admitted the word "tannoy" as a generic term for loudspeaker. You'll find it used throughout the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books by Douglas Adams. The British loudspeaker manufacturer Tannoy, who had trademark rights to their own name, put out a boastful press release proudly announcing it. Two days later corporate counsel had them send out another press release withdrawing the first one, warning publishers not to use the name as a generic term, and they sued the Oxford University Press to get the generic term out of the dictionary. Here's one more as a bonus. The American audio power amplifier manufacturer Crown International started distributing their stuff in Europe. Why not? Shortly after, they got an exquisitely polite letter, return address "Foreign Office, Westminster," informing them that "Crown" had been in use in the U.K. as an exclusive trademark for over 1,000 years, and if they imported any more such product it would be seized and destroyed. Should you want a real belly laugh, surf over to Wikipedia and read up on the "Burger King" trademark.
🐻during the test, while looking out the class window, I got distracted by a squirrel.🤷🏼♂️
🐿🐿🐿🐿🐿🐿
My mom arranged for me to have an extra two hours and to take all the tests open book. I have an anxiety disorder, and that's a real thing!
hardlyb 🤣😂No do overs for me or extended time limit. Da🐻 gave me a F grade and sent me to the principal's office for a paddling. Ouch! 🏓
@@theanvil5288 Old-school.
In college I had a geometry class that came to a grinding stop when a train went by because the professor would go to the window and watch it until it was gone!
Why you gotta embarrass us for Bear? Well at least I know what all those funny bits are for and named! Thanks Bear!
I would never call a Phillips (Trademark name) an "ANSI Type I Cross Recess"
I've used all these as a hammer, does that count?
When you have a nail, everything looks like a hammer....
Around these parts We refer to Phillips and strait blade screwdrivers as plus or minus screwdrivers
Lol
At one time those tongue & groove pliers were called water pump pliers. They were used to tighten the packing gland on water pumps of early cars. Also I agree with what was said about the Allen. Otherwise I got 8. Thanks, that was fun.
"Water pump" is the more generic term. I've seen them with at least four different mechanisms for holding a position: tongue and groove, the classic channellock style; little notches, as an older Craftsman pliers; push-button release types, such as Knipex Cobras, and a self-adjusting type that I forget the name of.
water pump pliers are different from grove joint as to how they engage the material and the swivel point
@@danohstoolbox en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongue-and-groove_pliers
Hard to beat you RED Beard some of us know you are in the tool business. Your family has been for a long time.
Lost me on the Vice Grips. I knew that wasn't the proper name but that's all I've ever heard them called. Growing up as a kid if my dad told me to bring him a Crescent wrench I knew what I'd better bring or he'd have slapped me upside the head with it. He was also known to substitute anything within arms reach as a hammer. He used to say "Don't use force. Just get a bigger hammer ".
My father was a machinist, you didn't use knuckle busters.
David Moran lol
2:20 In our shop we call those "knuckle busters"
First time I've ever seen a left-hand threaded Robertson-drive screw!
Cool video quiz! I didn't ace it but l did think of another type of screw head- the Clutch Head screw! Also called the Bow Tie screw found on classic GM vehicles.
QUIZ Which is more important, to state the official name of a tool or the common name when communicating with most people?
The proper vernacular to use is the one that will be understood and that may vary depending on with whom/where you are communicating.
@@davidmoran4471 Not sure what grade the Bear would give you but you get an A+ from me.
My wife said turny thing, squeeze thingies, oh oh oh A HAMMER! 🤣
I got 6. It would have been 7 but I thought the Vise Grips were just "locking pliers", not "locking clamp pliers". Gotta respect the honor system, here.
BTW: got me a blue "Approved" sticker coming next week. Going to be the first sticker for the inside of the lid on my orange USGeneral 26" top chest. I was going to leave it pristine, but I thought maybe a few of my favorites would be a nice touch. So you're the first!
"I said a hammer dammet a hammer!" Hank hill yells at the guy at the home depot who passes him a screw driver.
I refer to the tongue and groove pliers as arc joint pliers.
I was trying to remember that name! Tongue and groove is what I went with.
That was fun bear time for a beer.
Some people still call a refrigerator a frigidaire.
My grandmother did till she died. But that was at least a move forward from when she called it an ice box, which it wasn't. lol
Ha, cool vid. I got 8. Couldnt recall Robertson, and I called the tongue and groove pliers, slip jaw pliers. Oops
All tools have a hammer end and most have a pry end too....
When your only tool is a hammer every problem looks like a nail.
Slotted head is also referred to as a common head.
What about the crescent hammer? People shouldn’t get disqualified for calling that a hammer.. you know you’ve used an adjustable wrench for a hammer!
I've had to correct several contractors during my years installing security systems concerning the Robertson Head. Most just want to call it a square drive or square tip, no biggie
@@Michelle-Eden Yup, they all worshiped me as if I were the one & only God of the Universe. GTFOH with ur sarcasm
Adjustable wrench
I thought Phillip's head driver is actually called a Crux or cross recessed?
My daughter at around 17 yoa, was hanging out in the shop with her boyfriend while he was working on his Toy, being under the truck and she sitting at the bench, he asked her to grab him a Phillips. She looked around and after a bit replies, " you don't have any Phillips, all you have are Stanley's ". At least she can read.
I was waiting for "monkey wrench".
like the tests
Only got a 5 or so 'cause I said "screwdriver." And Robinson was a Square. Same difference. And if it attaches to a ratchet it's a socket, allen socket...but I did have fun. Shine on!
Great video red
I like this next time you should do old tools like hand planes and braces or even modern specialty tools by occupation i.e. mechanic,electrician,plumbing, ect..
9/10 I think the "vise grips" name brand applies to the "allen" name brand and is properly referred to as hex drivers.
Xerox - copy and Kleenex - tissue..... brings me back to my childhood when my grandmother called her refrigerator her "ice box" although it was not a true ice box. She did finally make the adjustment to what she called it... in a manner of speaking. She eventually started calling it her "Frigidaire", but she called everyone's refrigerator a Frigidaire, no matter what the brand of their refrigerator actually was. I guess once we start calling something by a certain name, we are hard pressed to break the habit later on. Regardless, though my tissues aren't actually Kleenex (they are Puffs brand), when my family members tell me we are out of Kleenexes, I know what they mean. I don't remind them that we haven't had an actual Kleenex in our house in years. *snicker, snicker". :-P
Anything can be a hammer if you're mad enough! 😃
8 for me. You got me with the Robertson and the tongue and grove pliers.
Same two i got wrong I've never heard them called tongue and groove pliers
Of course 'Cresent' wrench clould be called 'adjustable spanner'.
10. and my sticker says "don't ask to borrow my tools, and I won't ask to borrow your girlfriend".
Robertson bit got me. Always thought it was square drive
North of the border, Robertson, south of the Ca border square drive, as they are not licensed in the US.
I know some carpenters who only call the 90° drive tools Skilsaws. They don't speak about direct drive saws at all.
#1 is a prybar
Every tool has a hammer side. I'll turn in my toolbox on my way out.
No mater how hard you try, you still learn something.
Tongue and groove pliers are also called water pump pliers or pump pliers, in german Wasserpumpenzange.
www.amazon.de/87-250-Hochleistungs-Wasserpumpenzange-Schnelleinstellung-Mehrkomponenten-Griffh%C3%BCllen/dp/B0001P0CKC
The Lineman's pliers are called combination pliers in some countries, especially in Europe.
In german the Vise Grips are mostly called "Gripzange", came from the original Vise Grips (Irwin), but the correct name translates literally as "locking pliers" (some things aren't that different).
Allen is a trademark (Allen Manufuacturing Company in Hartfort/Conn. invented this design), hex-drive would be the correct "neutral" term. In Germany the trademark was "INBUS" for that system, but the neutral term is "Innensechskant" which can be translated as "internal hexagon". And there's also an external hexagon, but that's a different thing...that's actually a nut.
Tongue and groove pliers
Omg, this was great...except I only got a one. No joke! I hot the circular saw correct! Lol
You can have a Mulligan on this one
Got 9, couldn't remember the vice grips quick enough
I got all right but I put slash hammer all of the, so there.
1) keystone tipped slotted screwdriver
2) Torx® insert bit
3) Robertson power bit
4) Hex (official ASME/ISO) or Allen (trademark) bit "socket"
5) Phillips screwdriver
6) Adjustable wrench
7) Tongue and groove water pump pliers
8) Locking pliers
9) Lineman's pliers (although I seem to recall that Knipex has a different name for them).
10) Circular saw
Notes:
1) I would have used a flat head Phillips screw and a round head slotted screw as my examples.
2) I think ISO calls those hexalobular, not Torx®.
5) ASME/ISO calls that a type 1A cruciform head, IIRC. I think Posi-Drive is a type 1B and Reed-Prince is a type 2.
7) Amusing trivia: At Eastman Kodak, the name is strictly photocopy, never xerox. At Xerox, the name is strictly xerographic reproduction.
Nailed it!!!!
Good video Red
"Not looking for brand names...except when I am."
1 Slotted drives
1.1 Slot
1.2 Coin-slot drive
1.3 Hi-Torque
1.4 Cross
2 Cruciform drives
2.1 Frearson
2.2 Phillips
2.3 Pozidriv
2.4 Supadriv
2.5 Phillips II
2.6 French recess
2.7 JIS B 1012
2.8 Mortorq
3 Square drives
3.1 Robertson
4 Multiple-square drives
4.1 LOX-Recess
4.2 Double-square
4.3 Triple-square (XZN)
5 Internal hex drives
5.1 Hex socket
5.2 Double hex
6 Pentalobular sockets
6.1 Pentalobe
6.2 ASTER recess
6.3 TORX PLUS Tamper-Resistant
7 Hexalobular sockets
7.1 Torx
7.2 Torx Plus
8 Combination drives
8.1 ACR Phillips II Plus
8.2 Phillips/square
8.3 Recex
8.4 Slotted/Torx
8.5 Clutch
8.6 Thumbscrew
9 External drives
9.1 Square
9.2 Hex
9.3 Pentagon
9.4 External Torx
9.5 12-point
10 Tamper-resistant types
10.1 Breakaway head
10.2 Bristol
10.3 Line
10.4 One-way
10.5 Oval
10.6 Polydrive
10.7 Proprietary head
10.8 Security hex
10.9 Security Torx
10.10 Spanner
10.11 12-spline flange
10.12 Torq-set
10.13 Tri-angle
10.14 Tri-point
10.15 Tri-point-3
10.16 Tri-groove
10.17 Tri-wing
11 Other drive types
11.1 U-drive
Thanks for this....source?
I promise not to use it to be an anal prick to my worker friends
Down here in the South, the tongue and groove pliers are more commonly known as "Water Pump" pliers. I don't know a single person that calls those tools by the "real" name.
Just as hex drive v Allen drive is because it is a trade name. Torx v star drive is slightly different the auto companies sometimes name Star to avoid royalties. I worked at a place that made screws and the punches used to made them are slightly different, Same with pozi=drive and Phillips. I did like the title of Tool Badger mention earlier.
I am not changing what I call them!
second one was a bolt? not a screw right?
I got all of them, with that said, I still use vice-grip and channel lock on a daily basis. I am an electrician and a lot of my co-workers call the linesman pliers "Kleins" I guess it is what you are used to. Paul is right however, the rules were a little funny, ie vice-grip vs locking pliers and allen vs hex drive
I started off screaming flathead at my monitor, now I feel bad..
I like to call it an adjustable metric wrench
Scored a ten. Good video bear.
I was a lineman for many years. We never called lineman pliers lineman pliers. We called them 9's or 9 inch pliers. I guess like they don't call Chinese food Chinese food in China. They just call it food.
Back in the day! When I was in high school Auto Mechanic class. We used to call them Plain, and Philips screwdrivers.....
Could you discuss the Earthquake batteries. Earthquake has a 4 amp hour battery and it would be nice if it could be used on other HF battery tools.
Funny video but u know I got them all 👍🏼😘
I'll bet all those screws came from where I live which is known as the screw city, home of the rockford peaches, good old rockford Illinois
I somehow got them all and the slang for them. Square drive/Robertson bit did take me a few seconds to remember the technical name.
Also isn't Allen a brand name though? And that specific piece would've been an Allen socket not a wrench, I think.
That was fun bear, I got 7
this is good for asvab studying
You should have included slip-joint pliers.
Scored 9....would have scored 10,but I called it a Roberts bit instead of Roberson
That was more fun then expected. I got an 8
Flat or Slot tip screwdriver, torx/star bit, Robertson bit eh?, Allen bit, cross tip screwdriver, adjustable wrench, tongue n groove pliers, locking pliers, linesman pliers or “9’s”, circular saw, I didn’t cheat!
8, I missed vice grips and channel locks.
I'm lucky the Tool Badger. That was fun you should do more of name that tool vids
Joe Smith does and you can win stickers! 10 days or more and no winners on current tool after first few were guessed in 4 days or less
You can use security torx to unlock a security hex. And a regular torx to unscrew a regular hex. Life hack!!!!
Got an 8.....Happy with that
I've been called a bear a few times. *Chuckles* Gotta be more tricky to get this old dog. And everything was a flathead. :P
Double funny good job
So you don’t want to use brand name for the larger hand tools, but you use them for the fasteners! Torx, Allen, Phillips and Robertson are all brand names too! The correct would be Star, Hex, Cross and Square. Surely!?
I know I'm tricky like that
The bear missed one, Allen is a brand name
Linesman pliers
I got 9 out of 10 the only one I got wrong was calling the square head bit a box head bit
9 for me cause "flat head" is the only way to go. Slotted , really?
I got 5 but I had 9 if it wasn't for technicalities
Isn't it also known as a standard screwdriver
I got all screwed up on that test!
Did you screw up flatly?
I got the first one wrong but after that I got all right
My teacher taught us alote of tools including the proper real names
9-1
Hi bear! Isn't flathead an engine?
I'm definitely not a 10 but I'm tryin,luv the stickers my brand new craftsman toolbox is red beard approved
Now guess Joe Smith's tool of the week. 10 days no winners yet. Junk from work or Justin Dow should know it though. But probably never used it
Not quite no winners.
@@hughbrackett343 no one can unlock this mystery
Man I'm taking tests already and school hasn't started yet
Allen is a company name as opposed to the tool name, hex bit socket(what you showed). Does that make you a "Tool Badger"? Ha Ha Thanks Red/Jeff/Badger
Haha. Now all you clowns guess Joe Smith's tool of the week. 😆
@@SgtJoeSmith reusable bottle top???
@@jamesu nope. Can da bear key you in?
Please turn in your toolbox at the door lol
I like Paste
I'm a Tool Fox :-) Shine On Mr. Red Sir :-)
9 lol channel locks got me
Hex wrench being the correct answer bumped me up to a 7.