It's obvious that there is no torque because it spins super fast. Is that tool even useful? I wouldn't use it. Even if I were to finish the work with a proper wrench, I wouldn't use it because I could forget to tighten some of the screws after the fact...
My wife is an interior designer. I have learned the "You want to do what? With that? Wh...... Alrighty. I'll figure out how to make it happen" phrase. (Cheater point for the youngins, never finish the "why" part of that sentence, just run with it. Haha. Works out better in the end.
Eat your heart oot, James Burke. AvE presents the new series, "Inappropriate Connections; The Day the Universe Schmooed". (And a G-Rated version for Chickadee.)
@Joe T It ain't just Canada. It happened this year at our State Fair as well. People are dirty monsters. I think they should have handwashing sinks in line at every fast food restaurant. At least most of them would wash their hands once a day.
That's how you market consumer tools. Look at the cost spent on glossy full-color boxes at the store to gain a perceived minimal edge over the competition. Then there's the plastic storage case, foam, cardboard inserts, papers, catalogs, individually-wrapped components to create the "unboxing experience" to make it feel upscale, YET takes away dollars spent on building a better tool. There's only so much you can engineer into a $30 die grinder, and it isn't enough to make a meaningful difference from the competition. When you buy a $500+ Dotco/Cleco, or Aro industrial die grinder, it comes in a plain brown (sometimes white) cardboard box with a sticker that has the model number on it because glossy packaging doesn't add any value. You look up the specs on the website or a tooling catalog and you order it because you don't depend on sexy boxes to market. Granted, I'm comparing a $500+ die grinder to a $30 consumer one, but you're buying a well-engineered product that you know will last thousands of hours, have model stability, customer support, and replacement parts for 20+ years down the line. The instruction manual for my Aro 7980 turbine grinder has an initial release date of 08/28/1972 and it's still being made today.
It’s an electric ratchet, not an impact gun, I love my 3/8 Milwaukee ratchet, honestly I did a whole drive train swap on a 3/4 truck and used my Milwaukee small head 3/8 and dewalt 1/4 impact driver for 90% of the job, 18mm sockets and under really shine
AvE is rightfully wary of auto-erotic asphyxiation. Voice of experience? I dunno, but what can you expect from a guy that constantly exhorts us to keep our dicks in a vise. Amiright?
Oh he meant that literally. I thought **"slapping the desk with my hand and waking up the dog"*" was a thing people say when they are talking about internet porn.😎😂👌.
It makes sense that the snap-on would be better in pre-spin engagement test, since you're nearky making an impact driver with that and the snap-on had the fastest rotational speed. With KE=1/2*m*v^2, it gets quite a bit more energy to dump into the fastener then.
I use this trick with my snapon in real tight access spots, put the socket on the fastener, spin up the ratchet and jam it into the socket. supprising what itll crack off. EDIT - hopefully my snapon rep wont see this admission of abuse!
I agree. I've had the snap-on one for a year now and have used this to save my butt too many times... the planetary gears fail first. just break it loose by hand.
@@j.adamwegs2882 same thing with their cordless screw guns. I 3D printed some new gears and they worked well, but PLA can't take much load. I'll be trying again once I get a printer that can handle hotter material.
Brian Lachance: you know there are uretha expanders. They’re smooth curved stainless steel in a set from small to about 1/2” . My urologist didn’t warn me about what he was going to do. SURPRISE! .
Found out that there is a benefit to having the large battery end while undoing a pipe flange inside a septic tank. You can tie a safety rope around the body of the tool if you are working above a space where dropping the tool would destroy it (falling into the tank). With it tied off, no worries about retrieving it. If I tried that with the HF, the rope would slide off.
My snap ons been used and abused and it works like a dream one solid year of almost daily performance with fantasic battery life and nut busting power. It was very expensive yes but for how fast the tool is and how well it works theres nothing better imo.
I love all your videos. I basically watched all of them twice all ready. I really love your honest upfront comments! Please keep making them. If you have a extra print available I’d like one I’d frame it for my tool box at work.
Just picked up 4 shirts for the missus and I! We just bought our first house and your vids have already been incredibly helpful figuring out what tools to buy (or avoid). Thanks for all you do. We'd love to get a print to hang on the wall of our workshop! Thanks AvE!
Speaking of Torque and stretch, on our 3608 Cats, they use hydraulic pullers to pull/stretch the head studs and just hand tighten the nuts. Release the puller and the head is torqued. Slick process.
Brian A Davis Only F1 racing,but not for long.I found TV cancelling headphones by Bose a couple of years ago and will never look back.I figured l must have reached a significant degree of intelligence when I could no longer stomach TV.I guess the old adage that small things amuse small minds(in repetition)still holds true.👍
Yo AvE, thanks! Thanks for these BOLTRs, that one you did on the 1/2 inch Earthquake XL stubby impact gun saved my ass on a tricky Toyota repair job earlier this week, because I would’ve had to make a customer wait until next week while “the very expensive proper tool” was being shipped in. Your tear down showed that it could fit in a really tight area and had enough power to get that 1 damn bolt loose, and that it would survive long enough to put the bolt back IN.
AvE magically fulfilled my curiosities as to the logic of those wigs back in the day. Thank you sir... I had been wondering about that watching townsend and son.... and they never really gave answers i felt beyond it "just becoming the fashion"
I have the snap on at work (truck mechanic). Works great. Electric ratchets aren't for busting rusty nuts loose, they're for speedy install of fasteners, or removal if they're clean. Still wouldn't have the hazard frought
Your little history lesson at the start reminded me of the BBC TV series from 1978 "James Burke Connections". Fortunately this one comes from a time and origin where the audience was not considered stupid. Luckily it can still be found on that great achieving resource RUclips with a simple search.
I bought the snap on 3/8 electric ratchet close to a year ago. There isn’t a day that goes by I don’t use it. Same battery every day. I have noticed when you grease it the torque isn’t there like it is dry. I’ve used it from putting spiders in fuel vessels to changing transmissions on ford trucks. This thing to me is with the price tag due to the time it saves alone in just undoing the nut by hand. That and it’s a torquey little tool. Thanks for the review.
3000ft lbs- The 1in drive rachet from my Hazard Frought $110 ratchet set took 230lbs bouncing on the end of a 12ft drill rod before busting the end off. Was able to get 3 of the 1.5in 3/4-16(NF- my fave thread) nuts off my lull wheel. Got the other 29 off after spending $129 on their 1in impact- had to use 1/2in line before getting the twist she needed.
When I first started watching your vids I thought you were crazy and out of your mind.... After watching many of your wonderful videos that has been completely confirmed!
Nothing better than getting learnt by you. Fresh out of high school and going to school for machinist would be frogin awesome to have somethin for some shop dickery. Buddy in my class got some of your shirts and they confuse the fungus outa the other guys. I would spend the canadian copexes but school aint cheep.
I recall being an apprentice and being continually asked "now was that an accident or an act of stupidity? Now go sweep the floor again." Best safety advice I ever received.
Hey Uncle Bumblefuck, I just wanted to thank you for your presage pertaining to progress of personal precedence, possibly the most pertinent pointers present on this deposit of debauchery and destruction known as youtube. I'm a 22 year old hs dropout from wild rose country who's getting his shit together thanks to your shining example, upgrading and hoping to apply to post secondary for electrical enginerding. Sometimes all it takes is a positive influence to kickstart someones hopes and dreams and help them overcome the pitfalls of the human condition. I appreciate the h out of your words of wisdom and you've really shown me what focusing on building agency can do for ones sense of worth, more so than any traditional educator ever did. Cheers and best wishes to you! I'll be sending some beer money your way as soon as I get some!
Love wearing my tap chart shirt when I go to the meetings at the children's museum (hope they don't go the same route that The Geek Group went). I've learned more from your videos than the lab even had available.
The trick with these (at least for the Milwaukee) is once you pull the trigger to move the tool the opposite way it is trying to rotate. So when loosening rotate the tool just slightly as if you were trying to tighten it. This allows the tool to hammer and act like an impact. I wish they could incorporate something like this into the design but you get WAY more power out of the tool when doing this
Your great, your delivery is perfect for high school shop class. You would keep everyone's attention. If you had a TV show, you could call it "Ask Doctor Tool" and I would watch everyday....LOL. Your verbiage, accent and the like remind me of Ren and Stimpy for some reason.
Y'know, while I appreciate the mechanical analysis of tools, I don't come here just for that - I'm reasonably bright, and can establish skookum as needed. No, I come here for the fact that, in this particular recording, you managed to tie together venereal disease, 16th & 17th century French fashion statements, and flange sealant in a way that might make a shop class student more curious about biology, chemistry, and social studies - that's the kind of entertaining educational elucidation that keeps me coming back. Polymers aren't the only thing that should be cross-linked for durability - knowledge works the same way.
I use my 3/8 snap on for almost everything ive got the longer less torque version but so far ive found theres not much it cant do. I did a set of brakes yesterday even removing the caliper bracket with the tool and it works like a dream. Brakes, struts, pitman arms you name it this little guy will do it i even use it to align big trucks when setting the steering wheel and jamming the nut down.
Love the People Are Monsters hoodie! Excellent conversation starter at the pump and munchin! Used what should be illegal, legal tender footin the bill even. Thanks for the wisdoms and da laughs!🤣👊
Electric ratchets aren't intended for torquing or breaking loose nuts, they are intended to speed up the removal and installation. Removing tight nuts is what breaker bars are for, and torquing nuts is what torque wrenches are for.
Each time I watch a new video, I learn a new spelling-bee winning word. 'Obfuscation - the action of making something obscure, unclear, or unintelligible'. Me like!
Actually, my late 1980s history professors mentioned that the syphilis and some of the other STDs didn't show up in Europe until after Columbus sailed the ocean blue. IIRC, the Spaniards called it the Portuguese disease and the Portuguese called it the Italian disease, etc.
As a mechanic I have owned three air version of these. None of these is designed for dead stop torque. I always broker loose by hand then pulled trigger once it was loose.
My dad has a Milwaukee Electric drill that is 40 years old or more. It has so much torque that it will flip your workbench over. Of course it wasn't a wireless drill.
Another place metal ions are important: Making a souffle. When beating the egg whites, you need to use a copper or iron bowl (NOT stainless steel, the oxide layer prevents ions from releasing into the contents) if you want the egg whites to be easy to get right. The copper or iron ions that release into the egg whites are chelated (that is, chemically bound) by the protein in the egg white, which changes the properties of the egg white. Without the ions, it's relatively easy to overbeat the egg whites and the souffle is apt to fall if you look at it wrong.
I particularly like your videos where tools are the subject matter. While I am OK with using woodworking tools anything that belongs in the mechanical/engineering/metal working tool sphere I am uneducated. Of course like many of the human species I do like seeing what's inside a power tool or device. In Oz it would have to be "keep your Sidchrome in a vise" an Australian brand of mechanics' tools founded in Oz in 1931. The brand emerged when Royston Siddons' Siddons Drop Forgings Pty Ltd turned to tool making to fill post war shortages after World War II. Original production of Sidchrome tools in Australia was in the area of Brunswick, in the city of Melbourne, Victoria. Sidchrome, until 1996, were manufactured in Australia, but since being acquired by The Stanley Works (named Stanley Black & Decker since 2010) production is now undertaken in Taiwan.
I think that one of those prints would be a great heirloom piece to hand down to my future chickadee along with my Starrett automatic center punch I now own because of you.
Alot of impact drivers are packing some decent power theses days. The only similarity really is that they both accomplish speed. These ratchets are usually weaker because of the design and size, but they're really only made for reducing time in tighter places like exhaust manifold bolts and water pumps, which they are great for.
If'n you still have some of those fancy safety goat prints, I love to get one for my son who just started a cabinet making course at the local coconut college. PS: I feel like Prudence the safety goat every day he walks out the door.
I saw an old craftsman nicad one of these in the box untouched at a garage sale yesterday. Advertised fast charging time.... 3 hours! Picture on the box showed it in its wall caddy next to an outlet plugged in (no removable battery that I could see!) all nice and clean, ready for that home mechanic to use it twice a year to justify the higher electric bill. Out of frame I'm sure they had all your other favorites lined up like that on a pixie IV drip. Pretty sure I could just use a socket adapter on a drill for the times I'd want to use a thing like this, but I'm no auto mechanic (just do my own bicycle work).
I use the Earthquake XT Ratchet at work everyday and it does fine. The touque specs on the box are very exaggerated, but it's a good tool. At $100 for the tool the battery and the charger it's a good purchase. I just wish that they didn't lie on the marketing end of the specs. I always do the first 1/4 turn and last 1/4 turn by hand.
In practical application I found the stall rate can be just perfect on the 3/8 Milwaukee fuel. Just before you bust your knuckles. And unlike air powered you don't have to figure out how to reach around the back side and unhook the air hose to retrieve your crushed hand thankfully the 135 PSI shop air is applying enough Force to slow the bleeding
Ford 1.5 and 1.6 engines use flange sealant on some of the covers aluminum to a aluminum sealing in oil. Non pressure side. That part actually doesnt leak.
Really glad to see you fixed the kerning on Bleeeating, my shirt reads BL EEEAT ING. Still a great shirt to wear on jobs, especially if someone is giving you a 'wear gloves while writing in your notebook' speech.
If over tightened, retention knobs tend to bulge the small end of the taper on the tool holder. That could cause the tool to not have complete contact with the spindle taper. At least that’s what the tool salesman always told me. That might be something interesting to test. Your welcome
After having the first gen Milwaukee cordless ratchet , I upgraded to the snap on. It’s speed and torque are much better for daily abuse In The automotive field, and I feel the battery lasts much longer as well. Haven’t tried the new generation Milwaukee’s, but at this point I don’t feel I need to replace the snap on .
Graham Dallas soon not to be the uk if Jannette Kranky gets her way. That being said nice to see someone from this side of the pond watches this mad hatter too
Yeah I usually grab the head in one hand and the handle in the other to break things loose with an air ratchet, and then spin them off. If you run a bolt down fast and are holding on tight you can hit a bolt pretty hard on the way in when it bottoms.
My wife is a safety manager! I'd love a Safety-Goat print!
Double whammy! Piss of the wife and the safety dept in one fell swoop. name addy size colour please. townpumpcnc@hotmail.com
Nbahaaaahhhhh
It's obvious that there is no torque because it spins super fast. Is that tool even useful?
I wouldn't use it. Even if I were to finish the work with a proper wrench, I wouldn't use it because I could forget to tighten some of the screws after the fact...
I love a good safety meeting!
My wife is an interior designer. I have learned the "You want to do what? With that? Wh...... Alrighty. I'll figure out how to make it happen" phrase. (Cheater point for the youngins, never finish the "why" part of that sentence, just run with it. Haha. Works out better in the end.
I
Universal torque specifications; white knuckle tight on a short wrench or 1/4 turn before the casting breaks, whichever happens last.
I always went by torque it until it just starts to get easier to turn the wrench. 😊
I always just turn it until the fastener head snaps off, then back it off a quarter turn.
I laughed at loud at: "I tend to pass out before I finish the job."
LMAO, At that one too.
That shit ..... Was absolute gold!
Eat your heart oot, James Burke. AvE presents the new series, "Inappropriate Connections; The Day the Universe Schmooed". (And a G-Rated version for Chickadee.)
I'm having this AvE ❤️ framed and will hang it over the bench.
That was quite the digression into syphilis.
@Joe T It ain't just Canada. It happened this year at our State Fair as well. People are dirty monsters. I think they should have handwashing sinks in line at every fast food restaurant. At least most of them would wash their hands once a day.
Nothing wrong with “best price” tools if that’s your budget. Why must they lie about specs?
It's like steroids pay to play. I ask about mm² and wraps or c³
Marketing. Literally everything you buy is a lie.
"Harley the American motorcycle" parts made in Japan and china
You wouldn’t buy it if it said “sort of works, until the day after warranty is up”
@@whatsstefon At least they would be honest! People still buy cigs, even though it says "This shit will kill you" right on the package.
That's how you market consumer tools. Look at the cost spent on glossy full-color boxes at the store to gain a perceived minimal edge over the competition. Then there's the plastic storage case, foam, cardboard inserts, papers, catalogs, individually-wrapped components to create the "unboxing experience" to make it feel upscale, YET takes away dollars spent on building a better tool. There's only so much you can engineer into a $30 die grinder, and it isn't enough to make a meaningful difference from the competition.
When you buy a $500+ Dotco/Cleco, or Aro industrial die grinder, it comes in a plain brown (sometimes white) cardboard box with a sticker that has the model number on it because glossy packaging doesn't add any value. You look up the specs on the website or a tooling catalog and you order it because you don't depend on sexy boxes to market. Granted, I'm comparing a $500+ die grinder to a $30 consumer one, but you're buying a well-engineered product that you know will last thousands of hours, have model stability, customer support, and replacement parts for 20+ years down the line. The instruction manual for my Aro 7980 turbine grinder has an initial release date of 08/28/1972 and it's still being made today.
It’s an electric ratchet, not an impact gun, I love my 3/8 Milwaukee ratchet, honestly I did a whole drive train swap on a 3/4 truck and used my Milwaukee small head 3/8 and dewalt 1/4 impact driver for 90% of the job, 18mm sockets and under really shine
agreed.....i luv his take on 99% of what he does....but i think he missed the point on this one
At the plastic bag comment I slapped my desk and woke the dog
I put "slapped my desk and woke the dog" in the urban dictionary and came up empty - care to explain?
AvE is rightfully wary of auto-erotic asphyxiation. Voice of experience? I dunno, but what can you expect from a guy that constantly exhorts us to keep our dicks in a vise. Amiright?
@@laboulesdebleu8335 not a euphemism, pretty sure that was literal
That _was_ funny! (the plastic bag comment)
Oh he meant that literally. I thought **"slapping the desk with my hand and waking up the dog"*" was a thing people say when they are talking about internet porn.😎😂👌.
I'd love to see the customer service rep who has to handle the return. Especially after he sees the box was mangled by a jig saw.
I cannot believe that no-one has come out with the old joke: "One night with Venus, a lifetime with Mercury".
Considering how/where it was administered, might be a sympathetic pain based aversion. Yikes, I'll keep the disease...
It makes sense that the snap-on would be better in pre-spin engagement test, since you're nearky making an impact driver with that and the snap-on had the fastest rotational speed. With KE=1/2*m*v^2, it gets quite a bit more energy to dump into the fastener then.
I use this trick with my snapon in real tight access spots, put the socket on the fastener, spin up the ratchet and jam it into the socket. supprising what itll crack off. EDIT - hopefully my snapon rep wont see this admission of abuse!
I agree. I've had the snap-on one for a year now and have used this to save my butt too many times... the planetary gears fail first. just break it loose by hand.
Ive broken 4 snapon cordless ratchets doing that. It's always been the gears failing on them.
@@j.adamwegs2882 same thing with their cordless screw guns. I 3D printed some new gears and they worked well, but PLA can't take much load. I'll be trying again once I get a printer that can handle hotter material.
Don't forget, this is comedy, entertainment, and profiteering, not engineering. ;-)
I'd love to go on Teespring and buy one but the bastards at work have it on the blocked list. Surprisingly they let me google urethra expander.
Brian Lachance: you know there are uretha expanders. They’re smooth curved stainless steel in a set from small to about 1/2” . My urologist didn’t warn me about what he was going to do. SURPRISE!
.
@@hsbrooks spoons
Wait, is my dingus hole going to shrink as I age?!
@@freedumbsquirts4809 I think he meant he the doctor, not- he the dingus. The smaller the orifice, the higher the pressure.
Try it with Google Chrome in incognito mode.
Found out that there is a benefit to having the large battery end while undoing a pipe flange inside a septic tank. You can tie a safety rope around the body of the tool if you are working above a space where dropping the tool would destroy it (falling into the tank). With it tied off, no worries about retrieving it. If I tried that with the HF, the rope would slide off.
I think the fact that you beat that tool like an old Testament Hebrew and it still chooches, speaks volumes......
It's still twice the price of the ac delco model.
My snap ons been used and abused and it works like a dream one solid year of almost daily performance with fantasic battery life and nut busting power. It was very expensive yes but for how fast the tool is and how well it works theres nothing better imo.
“A little application of percussive maintenance...” 😂😂😂
I’m totally gonna use that.
I love how much I learn from this channel. Makes me look like the smart guy at work. But only us guys here know I'm no sharper than a light bulb
Light bulb? Didn't you mean to say 'Chinesium drill bit'?
Idk man, broken glass is pretty sharp
I love all your videos. I basically watched all of them twice all ready. I really love your honest upfront comments! Please keep making them. If you have a extra print available I’d like one I’d frame it for my tool box at work.
Just picked up 4 shirts for the missus and I! We just bought our first house and your vids have already been incredibly helpful figuring out what tools to buy (or avoid). Thanks for all you do. We'd love to get a print to hang on the wall of our workshop! Thanks AvE!
Speaking of Torque and stretch, on our 3608 Cats, they use hydraulic pullers to pull/stretch the head studs and just hand tighten the nuts. Release the puller and the head is torqued. Slick process.
The hawkers i used to work on the fan disk was a stretch fit on the shaft.
"So I was watchin' the TV the other day"
Thought this was Letterkenny for a sec, bud
F*ck!n hate degens from up norrth.
@@bigsexymanbear1950 Wonderous...
Seriously thought Wayne was about to make an appearance
Can confirm
Its spare parts bud
You and James Burke! Promoting history from then to now! "Connections", after all! :-)
Who still watches TV? Are you driving ahorse and buggy?
Brian A Davis Only F1 racing,but not for long.I found TV cancelling headphones by Bose a couple of years ago and will never look back.I figured l must have reached a significant degree of intelligence when I could no longer stomach TV.I guess the old adage that small things amuse small minds(in repetition)still holds true.👍
Appreciate the syphilis education, surprisingly interesting!
Yo AvE, thanks!
Thanks for these BOLTRs, that one you did on the 1/2 inch Earthquake XL stubby impact gun saved my ass on a tricky Toyota repair job earlier this week, because I would’ve had to make a customer wait until next week while “the very expensive proper tool” was being shipped in. Your tear down showed that it could fit in a really tight area and had enough power to get that 1 damn bolt loose, and that it would survive long enough to put the bolt back IN.
In this tough time in my life, I can forget most the weight on my mind when watching your vidjeeos and have a genuine laugh. Thank you so much AvE.
I don’t have a clue what this channel is but I love listening to him talk.
I like watching you put things back together.
Man I love your channel always learning with a good laugh.
Just found out this channel from my suggestions ngl this is the greatest channel ive ever seen😂 i love it!
AvE magically fulfilled my curiosities as to the logic of those wigs back in the day. Thank you sir... I had been wondering about that watching townsend and son.... and they never really gave answers i felt beyond it "just becoming the fashion"
I have the snap on at work (truck mechanic). Works great. Electric ratchets aren't for busting rusty nuts loose, they're for speedy install of fasteners, or removal if they're clean. Still wouldn't have the hazard frought
Different levels of abstractions!!!
Top
It is so nice how you circle on some other topics.
BR from Slovenia
Your little history lesson at the start reminded me of the BBC TV series from 1978 "James Burke Connections".
Fortunately this one comes from a time and origin where the audience was not considered stupid.
Luckily it can still be found on that great achieving resource RUclips with a simple search.
I bought the snap on 3/8 electric ratchet close to a year ago. There isn’t a day that goes by I don’t use it. Same battery every day. I have noticed when you grease it the torque isn’t there like it is dry. I’ve used it from putting spiders in fuel vessels to changing transmissions on ford trucks. This thing to me is with the price tag due to the time it saves alone in just undoing the nut by hand. That and it’s a torquey little tool. Thanks for the review.
3000ft lbs- The 1in drive rachet from my Hazard Frought $110 ratchet set took 230lbs bouncing on the end of a 12ft drill rod before busting the end off. Was able to get 3 of the 1.5in 3/4-16(NF- my fave thread) nuts off my lull wheel. Got the other 29 off after spending $129 on their 1in impact- had to use 1/2in line before getting the twist she needed.
Right on about TV producer’s treatment of their audiences.
When I first started watching your vids I thought you were crazy and out of your mind.... After watching many of your wonderful videos that has been completely confirmed!
9:44 "...tend to pass out before I finish the job"
Priceless!
hates commercials, video has no ads. love it
Nothing better than getting learnt by you. Fresh out of high school and going to school for machinist would be frogin awesome to have somethin for some shop dickery. Buddy in my class got some of your shirts and they confuse the fungus outa the other guys. I would spend the canadian copexes but school aint cheep.
I appreciate your honesty and if I didn’t have my kids bills to pay I would definitely contribute to the cause. Thank you.
tend to pass out... lol, that had me howling
I recall being an apprentice and being continually asked "now was that an accident or an act of stupidity? Now go sweep the floor again." Best safety advice I ever received.
I'm right with ya on the commercials....absolutely loath them!
Thanks for the video.
Hey Uncle Bumblefuck, I just wanted to thank you for your presage pertaining to progress of personal precedence, possibly the most pertinent pointers present on this deposit of debauchery and destruction known as youtube. I'm a 22 year old hs dropout from wild rose country who's getting his shit together thanks to your shining example, upgrading and hoping to apply to post secondary for electrical enginerding. Sometimes all it takes is a positive influence to kickstart someones hopes and dreams and help them overcome the pitfalls of the human condition. I appreciate the h out of your words of wisdom and you've really shown me what focusing on building agency can do for ones sense of worth, more so than any traditional educator ever did. Cheers and best wishes to you! I'll be sending some beer money your way as soon as I get some!
Love wearing my tap chart shirt when I go to the meetings at the children's museum (hope they don't go the same route that The Geek Group went). I've learned more from your videos than the lab even had available.
"Had to roll in flower to find the wet sport".
I, too, am a fan of The Last Boyscout.
That old chestnut predates talkies by at least a century.
The trick with these (at least for the Milwaukee) is once you pull the trigger to move the tool the opposite way it is trying to rotate. So when loosening rotate the tool just slightly as if you were trying to tighten it. This allows the tool to hammer and act like an impact. I wish they could incorporate something like this into the design but you get WAY more power out of the tool when doing this
As I'm always in a fight with health and safety at work, I would appreciate a safety goat print to prolong the passive aggressive battles
Your great, your delivery is perfect for high school shop class. You would keep everyone's attention.
If you had a TV show, you could call it "Ask Doctor Tool" and I would watch everyday....LOL.
Your verbiage, accent and the like remind me of Ren and Stimpy for some reason.
If you only ever use "your" your bound to get your grammar right part of the time :)
Y'know, while I appreciate the mechanical analysis of tools, I don't come here just for that - I'm reasonably bright, and can establish skookum as needed. No, I come here for the fact that, in this particular recording, you managed to tie together venereal disease, 16th & 17th century French fashion statements, and flange sealant in a way that might make a shop class student more curious about biology, chemistry, and social studies - that's the kind of entertaining educational elucidation that keeps me coming back. Polymers aren't the only thing that should be cross-linked for durability - knowledge works the same way.
I think Ave should open a tool repair shop. He has such a gentle hand.
Thank you for explaining torque bolt stretch. I never quite understood it before.
I use my 3/8 snap on for almost everything ive got the longer less torque version but so far ive found theres not much it cant do. I did a set of brakes yesterday even removing the caliper bracket with the tool and it works like a dream. Brakes, struts, pitman arms you name it this little guy will do it i even use it to align big trucks when setting the steering wheel and jamming the nut down.
Like the Weld hoodie - might have a go after Christmas when the cash flow improves...
Love the People Are Monsters hoodie! Excellent conversation starter at the pump and munchin! Used what should be illegal, legal tender footin the bill even. Thanks for the wisdoms and da laughs!🤣👊
"I'm hoping you remember how to get this back together..." 😂😂
Electric ratchets aren't intended for torquing or breaking loose nuts, they are intended to speed up the removal and installation. Removing tight nuts is what breaker bars are for, and torquing nuts is what torque wrenches are for.
Each time I watch a new video, I learn a new spelling-bee winning word. 'Obfuscation - the action of making something obscure, unclear, or unintelligible'. Me like!
Actually, my late 1980s history professors mentioned that the syphilis and some of the other STDs didn't show up in Europe until after Columbus sailed the ocean blue. IIRC, the Spaniards called it the Portuguese disease and the Portuguese called it the Italian disease, etc.
As a mechanic I have owned three air version of these. None of these is designed for dead stop torque. I always broker loose by hand then pulled trigger once it was loose.
My dad has a Milwaukee Electric drill that is 40 years old or more. It has so much torque that it will flip your workbench over. Of course it wasn't a wireless drill.
Another place metal ions are important: Making a souffle. When beating the egg whites, you need to use a copper or iron bowl (NOT stainless steel, the oxide layer prevents ions from releasing into the contents) if you want the egg whites to be easy to get right. The copper or iron ions that release into the egg whites are chelated (that is, chemically bound) by the protein in the egg white, which changes the properties of the egg white. Without the ions, it's relatively easy to overbeat the egg whites and the souffle is apt to fall if you look at it wrong.
Great tools for speed ,ease of assembly and tear down .
My wife's name is...Prudence! But since I live in Oz, I'll understand if no Tee shart is forthcoming. Love your work regardless, Uncle BF!
I am a safety assurance engineer for NASA. We need to send more safety goats into space. Grey L. Cheers.
I particularly like your videos where tools are the subject matter. While I am OK with using woodworking tools anything that belongs in the mechanical/engineering/metal working tool sphere I am uneducated. Of course like many of the human species I do like seeing what's inside a power tool or device. In Oz it would have to be "keep your Sidchrome in a vise" an Australian brand of mechanics' tools founded in Oz in 1931. The brand emerged when Royston Siddons' Siddons Drop Forgings Pty Ltd turned to tool making to fill post war shortages after World War II. Original production of Sidchrome tools in Australia was in the area of Brunswick, in the city of Melbourne, Victoria.
Sidchrome, until 1996, were manufactured in Australia, but since being acquired by The Stanley Works (named Stanley Black & Decker since 2010) production is now undertaken in Taiwan.
I think that one of those prints would be a great heirloom piece to hand down to my future chickadee along with my Starrett automatic center punch I now own because of you.
Ave did you remember to put the driven sun gear and shaft back in the first time, or did you hear me yelling that you missed it.
It goes in from the top I think - the crank end won't fit otherwise.
Most of Ave's vijayoh's are above my intellectual pay grade, but this one is absolutely brilliant.
Best speech about safety I've ever heard. And I wonder why does the cook ware chain mail gloves. Orders from above.
Wonder how these compare to the right angle impact drivers, both in real-world torque and internals.
Not even remotely in the same ballpark. Some of the right angle impacts out there are getting pretty beastly.
Alot of impact drivers are packing some decent power theses days. The only similarity really is that they both accomplish speed. These ratchets are usually weaker because of the design and size, but they're really only made for reducing time in tighter places like exhaust manifold bolts and water pumps, which they are great for.
If'n you still have some of those fancy safety goat prints, I love to get one for my son who just started a cabinet making course at the local coconut college. PS: I feel like Prudence the safety goat every day he walks out the door.
Ave, Thanks for the follow up on these ratchets, LMFAO at the plastic bag joke. I guess I've been doing it wrong all these years ?
I have added numerous words to my vocabulary because of this man, namely "schmoo" and "chooch." The other words were already there... ;-)
Andrew Summers same here.
I'm with you on the value of TV these days. Really bad now but takes on a totally radioactive quality when it's election season.
I saw an old craftsman nicad one of these in the box untouched at a garage sale yesterday. Advertised fast charging time.... 3 hours! Picture on the box showed it in its wall caddy next to an outlet plugged in (no removable battery that I could see!) all nice and clean, ready for that home mechanic to use it twice a year to justify the higher electric bill. Out of frame I'm sure they had all your other favorites lined up like that on a pixie IV drip.
Pretty sure I could just use a socket adapter on a drill for the times I'd want to use a thing like this, but I'm no auto mechanic (just do my own bicycle work).
I would like to see you go head to head with torque wrench to see how close your arm calibration is.
I use the Earthquake XT Ratchet at work everyday and it does fine. The touque specs on the box are very exaggerated, but it's a good tool. At $100 for the tool the battery and the charger it's a good purchase. I just wish that they didn't lie on the marketing end of the specs. I always do the first 1/4 turn and last 1/4 turn by hand.
In practical application I found the stall rate can be just perfect on the 3/8 Milwaukee fuel. Just before you bust your knuckles. And unlike air powered you don't have to figure out how to reach around the back side and unhook the air hose to retrieve your crushed hand thankfully the 135 PSI shop air is applying enough Force to slow the bleeding
I’m going to have to purchase one of those stickers for in my snappy truck!!
Ford 1.5 and 1.6 engines use flange sealant on some of the covers aluminum to a aluminum sealing in oil. Non pressure side. That part actually doesnt leak.
Our little shop has 0 concern for safety so some real safety posters like this would be great!
Really glad to see you fixed the kerning on Bleeeating, my shirt reads BL EEEAT ING. Still a great shirt to wear on jobs, especially if someone is giving you a 'wear gloves while writing in your notebook' speech.
the tshirt and prints just made my day.
Try reducing weight between the drive and the nut. Weight absorbs all the torque.
If over tightened, retention knobs tend to bulge the small end of the taper on the tool holder. That could cause the tool to not have complete contact with the spindle taper. At least that’s what the tool salesman always told me. That might be something interesting to test. Your welcome
My fathers favorite quote...if can't dazzle them with brilliance.....thanks for that!
thank you, i was getting anxious for a new one!!
Already bought the shirt. Wouldn't mind the print to add to my Wall Of Shame at work.
The connection between power tools and the clap is obvious. Both can sting and make your eyes water.
Syphilis, who knew! Thank you Uncle Bumblefuck!
"Depending on how long I wait, it doesn't take much at all to bust-a-nut".... 😂😂😂😂😂 that should be on a t-shirt.
After having the first gen Milwaukee cordless ratchet , I upgraded to the snap on. It’s speed and torque are much better for daily abuse In The automotive field, and I feel the battery lasts much longer as well. Haven’t tried the new generation Milwaukee’s, but at this point I don’t feel I need to replace the snap on .
I thought it prudent to order a t-shart, there's no way the cannon will reach me knowing my luck.
Graham Dallas or my luck, the cannon would reach but the incoming is something way more substantial than a T-Shirt?
Graham Dallas I’ve got no chance it reaching me in the uk then
@@leerobinson4210 I'm in NE Scotland
Graham Dallas soon not to be the uk if Jannette Kranky gets her way. That being said nice to see someone from this side of the pond watches this mad hatter too
My research has shown that there is a matter of debate as to who gave syphilis to whom.
Fascinating about the sealant, though!
After watching your channel and “zips ties and bias plies” only differences between you and peg is the junk yard full of fords and a stunned dog.
These powered ratchets are for spinning fasteners you are supposed to use muscle power for your final torqueing or cracking loose.
Yeah I usually grab the head in one hand and the handle in the other to break things loose with an air ratchet, and then spin them off. If you run a bolt down fast and are holding on tight you can hit a bolt pretty hard on the way in when it bottoms.