Hacksaws at Last Best Tool: The Good, the Bad, and the Outdated

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
  • Doc at Last Best Tool discusses hacksaws with particular attention to handles, blade retention, features, and preferences. Highlighted are Snap On, Craftsman, Stanley, Kobalt, and Milwaukee.

Комментарии • 26

  • @pieces94
    @pieces94 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the comparison of several small hacksaw handles. I’ve been considering that Snap On but don’t use them often, however, since when was need a condition to get a tool?

  • @jjrock5
    @jjrock5 Год назад +2

    14:06 could you please provide a part number for that Milwaukee hand saw?

  • @shieldcracker
    @shieldcracker 2 года назад

    That SnapOn hacksaw was also sold as a Craftsman Professional (BK/GD) for about $25 the oem is (was) Bahco, it's a very well balanced saw but somewhat one dimensional. I still use the Craftsman square tubular frame hacksaw which was top of the line before the Bahco came out, I think is still in production since that model has been oem'd by many tool brand. I also bought the new Dewalt model it feels very solid but is heavy and therefore stays on the garage.

  • @_P0tat07_
    @_P0tat07_ 3 года назад +1

    I dislike the mini hacksaws. There’s no tension applied to the blades so they like the twist a lot. I do like the idea of the snap on one, having the locking mechanism on the handle end. Have you had any issues with your thumb loosening that thumbscrew on the snap on mini hacksaw? That would be my concern with it.

    • @lastbesttool
      @lastbesttool  3 года назад +1

      The Snap On mini hacksaw hold the blade solidly. I've not had any loosening either by my own thumb or time sawing. But it is also such a hand knob that checking it and adjusting as necessary is totally convenient.

  • @luciusirving5926
    @luciusirving5926 Год назад

    Lennox is my favorite hacksaw blade brand by the way and is the only Made In America sawblade for me. 18 tpi for heavy steel, 24 tpi for sheet metal.

  • @rocklobster4094
    @rocklobster4094 3 года назад

    I think the twisting mechanism activates the cross pin that secures the blade. Old file handles used a wedge/screw combination. The Milwaukee seems to just lock the blade, not actually grab the blade with friction. At least that’s how I remember my Sawzall works.

  • @drengskap
    @drengskap 2 года назад +4

    That Snap-On hacksaw is identical to the Bahco 319 hacksaw, except it probably costs three times as much...

    • @---Michael---
      @---Michael--- Год назад +1

      Also identical to the German Hoffmann Garant Hacksaw

  • @sandy_knight
    @sandy_knight 2 года назад

    I never realised that hacksaw blades are directional (I rarely use them except for cutting carbon handlebars occasionally). When using them in a small hacksaw couldn't you just run the blade backwards (as a pull saw) if you want to make use of the loose end of the blade?
    FYI, those small hacksaws are commonly called a 'junior' hacksaw in the UK.
    Also, worth mentioning, Bosch make a Sawzall blade handle (BSH000495), it's not folding but it does store a couple of blades in the handle.

    • @drengskap
      @drengskap 2 года назад +1

      Those mini hacksaw frames aren't junior hacksaws - junior hacksaws take special thin 6" blades, whereas these frames take full-size blades.

    • @LordPondscumXIV
      @LordPondscumXIV 2 года назад +1

      You can, I usually run the blades as a pull saw rather than push.

  • @TylerSnyder305
    @TylerSnyder305 3 года назад +1

    I had a Starrett like that tubular style Craftsman.
    It was an excellent saw but I traded it to my grandmother for a swedish made KLEIN.
    The Starrett was a nicer saw but I logged so many hours with that KLEIN as a kid and I didn't want have to inherit it.
    It would be a sad occasion and I'm not sure I'd really be able to enjoy using the saw at that point, and I'd rather be using it already.
    In fact I just used it and do multiple times a week.

  • @shannonmcstormy5021
    @shannonmcstormy5021 2 года назад

    From an EDC perspective, is there a Collapsible saw that can use both Silky saw blades and hacksaw blades, or just a compact and light tool that can be fitted with both wood and hacksaw blades ? I'm looking for a compact, light tool set where tools can fit multiple roles, similar to the direction that bit drivers have gone?

    • @xlXTBUSXlx
      @xlXTBUSXlx 2 года назад

      Look at milwaukee jab saw, might be what you're looking for

    • @muxmurki1497
      @muxmurki1497 Год назад

      Not from Silky (to my knowledge), but from WILPU. It takes all sorts of Sawzall blades and has also a ¼“ Bit driver and stores 7 bits in the handle.

    • @hjohn2
      @hjohn2 Год назад

      Yes! Look at the Gerber Freescape Camp Saw. It comes with a tree cutting blade, but is easily swapped with a hacksaw blade.

  • @luciusirving5926
    @luciusirving5926 Год назад

    A panel hacksaw with micarta frame and thin spring steel (which you can get from recycled handsaws) is the best for your money.
    Able to cut tires, cars and bedframes tirelessly. No finicky frame is needed. Hacksaw blades are cheap and good quality, but everyone knows that.
    In my country, finding a 24 tpi sawzall blade is very difficult and even if I can buy one, it would be very expensive.

  • @littlejimmy7402
    @littlejimmy7402 Год назад

    Those little guys I always considered for PVC.

  • @dennisfabian2570
    @dennisfabian2570 Год назад

    You should have never shown me the Milwaukee Fixed place reciprocating blade hacksaw.. don’t want any other one now

  • @dragonrider93
    @dragonrider93 3 года назад +1

    @14:06 The Milwaukee handle reminds me of a high end file hand.......Pinchs the blade in there.

  • @fa-ajn9881
    @fa-ajn9881 Год назад

    Wish the snap on had blade storage.

  • @prasadvn524
    @prasadvn524 2 года назад

    Round or square handles for a saw all blade is not comfortable.A rectangular or oval handle is better

  • @62Cristoforo
    @62Cristoforo 2 года назад +1

    I still swear by the classic hacksaw; simple, durable and effective. Throw away every other design that followed, even up to today’s gimmicks.

  • @barrypitts8388
    @barrypitts8388 Год назад

    Take the blade out and flip it around