We will test the strength of ratchet socket wrenches using a hydraulic press. Different price range and made in different countries
КОМЕНТАРІ: 3 100
@metalavenger23Рік тому
Here’s the thing, at least 3 of those wrenches were made in China. The matkita and milluaukee are, I’m pretty sure both made by the same megacorp in China.
@seafood_haterРік тому
Lol I was gonna say the same thing
@user-bn5ut9pl5sРік тому
If the manufacturing process is the same, it doesn't matter who makes it. The key is who does the quality control.🤔
@nk59425 місяців тому
@@user-bn5ut9pl5sNo, the most important thing is you got what you paid
@taktlosnixda24783 місяці тому
wurth is also made in china.....
@haiglispicci3 місяці тому
@@taktlosnixda2478and your 2buck iPhone too...
@nikspanakisРік тому
I'll remember not to apply more than 400 kg with my hand. Thanks.
@QuadMechРік тому
Said force or more could easily be achieved by 'hand' with the addition of a 'cheater bar/pipe'!
@platanoasaoРік тому
Lmao 🤣☠️💀🤣☠️💀😂 best comment
@wsm7929Рік тому
On site cheat bars are used all the time with people putting there whole body weight on them to get bolts off. That must achieve something close to 400 kg
@richar1414Рік тому
Jajajajajajajajajajajajajaja you make me laugh!!!! 😂
@2GringosOnTheGulfРік тому
75 plp n this guy have no clue 😂
@dragster100Рік тому
I will help to summarize it as below: $ Kg Kg/$ Milwaukee 70 577 8.24 Makita 45 443 9.84 Wurth 35 436 12.46 Forsage 10 385 38.50 Noname 2 65 32.50 So in summary, while Milwaukee wrench demonstrates the best quality, it's worth noting that in terms of Kg/$ spent, Forsage wrench appears to be the best bang for the buck.
@hotstud178 місяців тому
I wouldn’t necessarily say forsage is the best bang for buck. Maybe for a light duty mechanic but in the end Milwaukee or makita would be the better option. Especially when they hold their value longer
@soroushzaker41737 місяців тому
👏👏👏👌forcage is the best one. 370 kg in 30 centimeter means about 1300 N/m.
@culage7 місяців тому
_____________$ Kg Cost per Kg Milwaukee 70 577 0.12 Makita 45 443 0.10 Wurth 35 436 0.08 Forsage 10 385 0.02 Noname 2 65 0.03
@Hamilkar19736 місяців тому
Thank you!
@4stro6oy6 місяців тому
Except additional cost for gasoline to go buy a new one. AND, if it is your profession, you have to refuse requests from customers if tools are broken which is a terrible opportunity loss.
@yzhang9265Рік тому
Thanks for the video. $70 wrenches must be better than $10 ones otherwise buyer will be mad. But the difference of broken point force doesn't justify the $60 cost difference LOL
@peiueheh94544 місяці тому
Thanks, I will by 700$ wrenches, and stay hungry for the whole month.
@JoeyRam.2 місяці тому
The wrench Pittsburgh label is cheap and lifetime warranty. You take it to the H. Freight store and they will exchange it for a new one.
@absolom76912 місяці тому
The difference being, if you need tools for home, perfectly fine to buy cheap. It's different when you rely on your tools to make a living. Spend a bit more to have the confidence that they won't let you down when they are needed to pay the bills.
@AkioWasRight2 місяці тому
It's not just the breaking point alone that has to justify the cost, there's also wear and long-term durability. You also have to consider the general performance of the tool and how well the mechachinism ratchets. A cheap, sloppy ratchet mechanism can be difficult to use in a tight operating space. So, you might want something high quality and precise.
@ahoorakiaМісяць тому
it's a 15$ wrench and 55$ brand name since they are mostly made in CHINA,VIETNAM,and MEXICO
@xaviahmad636811 місяців тому
Finally i know my favourite tool ratchet brand i use in my workshop after 10years. Tq noname.
@EmmePUBG2 місяці тому
Xddd
@GramonionРік тому
I don’t know about you guys but I’m pretty impressed with the actual socket used!
@jwanilpatel322313 днів тому
Solid metal is stronger than teeth on a gear ....whats so surprising about that ?
@just1ofozz8 днів тому
@@jwanilpatel3223 The mechanism was stronger than the solid metal square for more than half the tools here. The socket is actually pretty badass.
@factaviedauite5383Місяць тому
Maybe all of them were made in China except 1970s, even the hydraulic press😂😂
@avenzhang5185Місяць тому
that's true different price different quality
@liudavid9533Місяць тому
😅😅are you kidding me this is a joke who told you they’re made in china this is bullshit
@ML-st7fv29 днів тому
The more expensive ones will most likely have better quality. This video can calculate the cost-effectiveness, but it cannot tell which country’s products have better or worse quality.
@scsc225527 днів тому
Exactly!
@scsc225527 днів тому
@@liudavid9533it is right. Most of those tools are surely made in China. The brands owner leads the quality. For example milwaukee is made in China
@tonysia64743 місяці тому
Thank you for showing the strength of these materials. 👍👍👍
@TheIldebrandozМісяць тому
What purpose would it have served? Can you apply such high force using your hands?
@azotedelaincoherencia739514 днів тому
@@TheIldebrandoz with time you would have the Same result.
@easttexasengineering3489Рік тому
As a modern engineer I’m not surprised that the 1970 wrench still took 1/2 the abuse and still was somewhat functional. New is cheaper, lighter, and economical to built but not always better. Modern cars are a great example of how crappy technology can be. You will never see a 2020 car survive until 2050 but yet all the cars built in 1970 have still made it to 2020. Sure they are heavy and get 15 mpg but they still made the journey and that’s what counts. Old engineering was built to last, not engineered to get you past the warranty so you can buy another. I will never forget my roots.
@silverdog63Рік тому
The problem is that is you who are not going to survive in case of a serious accident
@easttexasengineering3489Рік тому
@@silverdog63 do your studies and not what they are telling you. More deaths today because of cars completely crushing. Old cars stood through accidents, sure we had deaths but not from hitting a deer, tree, large cat, hog, wooden fence etc. these are all things today’s cars will clasped in a low speed accident. The same people telling you new cars are better are the same people telling you electric car are green and that the oceans are rising. Remember Florida and California were not supposed to have beaches by 2010!!! People need to learn common sense again not what the brochure is telling you written by the person who benefits you buying it.
@vladimirkhol8354Рік тому
Amen
@MeBallermanРік тому
Not all cars from 1970 have survived? What drug are you on? The 1970ies were known to produce some of the worst rust buckets ever built?
@easttexasengineering3489Рік тому
@@MeBallerman it’s good that you have an opinion but you make no sense. Look around you at the number of old cars that survived. The steel back than was 1/4-1/8 on the frame and 16 gauge doors, today,s cars are 30-26 gauge doors with lots of creases to make them sturdy. As an 43 year old engineer I seen it all and nothing built by corporate owned companies is built for the interest of surviving just to get by and sell them another. I will stand by my statement. But for your liberal tree hugging buddies a 1970 car probably didn’t survive if it was burned, crashed, found in the ocean on the Titanic I hope that clears it up for you!!
@CSSSOLIVEIRAРік тому
I can say that a $10 Chinese wrench is totally enough because I never saw a 400kg tightened screw...
@nielsonzhen3751Рік тому
the same $10 china wrench i bought in china with delivery cost $2. its not very good but could use. if you pay $10in china you can got german quality wrench
@kongyawliew4532Рік тому
stupid test
@peekaboopeekaboo1165Рік тому
@@nielsonzhen3751 Next time buy top Chinese brand.
@williamwallace7299Рік тому
It would be a bolt and some torque specs go into the hundreds of foot pounds.
@xstxaleebueno3017Рік тому
El mecanismo es lo que fallara primero, con el uso diario es lo que fallan, sinla usas cientos de veces a la semana se quebra el mecanismo, lo digo por experiencia laboral, hemos quebrado 6 aprox en un año y las de mala calidad no duran ni 2 semanas.
@kennethanway7979Рік тому
You should list them when finished. Would help to figure out what to buy! Thank you! Love your videos! 😀
@mirosawrogowski3270Рік тому
Porównanie z dupy wykonaj identyczne otwory jak w pozostałych
@lutomson3496Рік тому
Look at project farms channell he does a more comprehensive test and lists
@kennethanway7979Рік тому
@@lutomson3496 he has good site!
@aliancemdРік тому
If you buy based on whether you can put 420 or 440kg with your hands, you are buying on the wrong things… I think the Japanese and the German one are better for work because of the handle.
@aestheticterritory9 місяців тому
For the quality, Milwaukee wins For the price at kg/$, Forsage wins $1 for 8.24 kg Versus $1 for 38.50 kg
@dragster100Рік тому
It's also important to note that the RATE of applying the downward force in the abovementioned test has to be constant across all the wrenches, or else it wouldn't be a fair comparison.
@user-ul7rl9hu3n3 місяці тому
Она постоянно. Всё хорошо, дорогой
@EF58-150Рік тому
hello The most famous wrench manufacturers in Japan are “KTC” and “TONE”, so I wanted to test with either of them. By the way, "MAKITA" is famous for electric tools. I'm using a translation tool, so I'm sorry if the sentences are strange.
@fatcomputerРік тому
never mind, none of them represents the best from each
@paulrodriguez300Рік тому
Sounds okay for a translation.
@sawangkulupahard2743 місяці тому
Makita strong as electric tool
@user-qm6ov1bg3v2 місяці тому
Добрый день. Автор из России, купить KTC или TONE можно только под заказ, причём за очень высокую стоимость и сроки доставки. Тут представлены ключи которые продаются в обычном строительном магазине в России. Старые инструменты которые автор предоставляет на канале - обычно производства СССР
@superbee7936Рік тому
For those who think "any ratchet will do" is only true when its concerns strength. The difference in quality and design is a huge difference on the force one can apply. I had the pleasure to work with all major brands throughout my career. And it really makes a difference on how easy and fast you can do the job with proper tools.
@sopissedoffРік тому
Yes super Bee ,if a man can pull with that much power and hold it ,ITS NOT A RACHET HE NEEDS , YES there's better ,but the test wasn't about that ,so any rachet will do if it's only about applying power ,I have never seen anyone using a press on a rachet to slacken a bolt ,so in essence you r not so superbee unless u have been watching something else
@superbee7936Рік тому
@@sopissedoff The video shows the quality off the materials and the ratchet and it teeth. In this way the videomaker tries to show the quality of the tool. Sure no one can apply that much force. But what i wa aying is that there 's a difference in the afformentioned and the actual quality of use of the different brands. The chrome Snap on ratchet i have is one the strongest, but not the one who is best on grip and leverage wise. So the comment that any ratchet will do, STRENGTHWISE, is treu. Practical there is a great difference. And i wouldn't have to explain this to anybody who works with his hands......
@sopissedoffРік тому
@@superbee7936 I've had expensive tools and lost them ,had cheap and lost them ,and I hated seeing people putting poles over rachets for leverage ,yes there's good and better ,mid range probably cut the mustard good enough,A nice we fine 1/4 inch is possible the finest tool ,the rest of the toolbox pays the bills
@sopissedoffРік тому
@@superbee7936 does show quality,
@carlosbermudez2323Рік тому
there is no difficult work if not inadequate tools  There is no difficult work if not inadequate tools.
@alfonsoalvarez50443 місяці тому
Más Arrecho y RESISTENTE es la Base, el Material y El DADO juntos con el sistema hidráulico que Han tenido que resistir TODAS esas Presiones de Pruebas, Excelente Muy Bien, saludos desde Caracas Venezuela 💪👍🤟
@exitusthirteenРік тому
I dont know if the distance between center of rotation and the press is always the same, but it seems like the handles have different length. So it would be nice to make the results comparable by using newton meter. In addition the tension inside the square would be interesting.
@mkilic10Рік тому
I took screenshots, put the pics one on top of the other and yes, the distance between the center of rotation and the press is always the same, regardless the handle size.
@joseperdomo9278Рік тому
You are wrong. Although the handle is longer, the distance where the press is placed is the same. then the motor of the press exerts exactly the same force.
@exitusthirteenРік тому
@@mkilic10 Thanks for checking!
@exitusthirteenРік тому
@@joseperdomo9278 Well technically no, because of the linear motion of the press and the rotary motion of the handle the distance will slightly change. Additionally, the highest force is not always at the exact same point. But I think this is negligible, because it is a YT-Video and not a scientific experiment.
@joseperdomo9278Рік тому
@@exitusthirteen It doesn't matter if the press starts higher or lower, the angle in grades of the handle where the press exerts pressure is the same and the distance from that pressure to the screw central is the same. So, it's the same.
@NdignityРік тому
It is a pity that the representative made in Japan is "Makita". Japan has the strongest brands, "KTC" and "TONE".
@stephenconway2468Рік тому
@@andreaspallasch8372 I agree. I buy Würth only if I can't get something else.
@christosioannou6273Рік тому
They have j.o.b marvel tools as well not pretty but so professional better than all the usual "good" brands they sell us
@user-kv6tq9rq3rРік тому
@@andreaspallasch8372 "Japanese copied from nobody" yes they do through they entire history 🤣 Find out where Japanese writing, culture, weapons, construction methods and more come from
@demcq9534Рік тому
Would be nice to see each country’s best but that could get expensive quick. Would love to see Snap On, MAC, Cromwell
@user-kv6tq9rq3rРік тому
@@demcq9534 need money to buy it all
@jyrovmtРік тому
For Japan it should be Koken wrench. Makita product is famous only electric handtool.
@bryanlarrea2867Рік тому
Nah, nepros
@ciscodiaz5786Рік тому
Klein... no electrician I know EVER uses Makita, anything.
@nagirinn46589Рік тому
KTC(KYOTO TOOL Co.Ltd 京都機械工具)
@pouzar11cz3 місяці тому
Electrician? He said electric tools and that is truth at least in europe.
@e_wtwwmymu2 місяці тому
日本ではTONEが有名です。
@chuck58983 місяці тому
I’ve had my no name ratchet set for 35 years, works great.
@SaintSaint2 місяці тому
Thank you for this video. You have shared valuable information. Some in the comments refuse to convert that to wisdom. I just built a 10m radio tower and ballast with my 1940's Snapon ratchet/gauge... but y'all can just keep talkin trash and livin your best life.
@Sam-gt2vwРік тому
These tests have two big problems. First, you should maintain constant lever length to know the real torque each wrench can withstand. In addition to that, regarding the wrenches have some flexibility, you should also consider the deformation reached on each test, and the lever ratio to know the actual maximum force, due to the lever changes along the press way down to the breaking point.
@leerzeichen1910Рік тому
Not many people will understand what you’re saying
@mugiwara2902Рік тому
its not a test, its just "lets put these ratchets under hydraulic press and see what happens"
@kleeo83Рік тому
The distance between the square center to the press is constant, so isn't the first condition fairly well managed? changes with the height of the press in the point of break is occurred by deformation, it may change the kg but won't really change the rank.
@Sam-gt2vwРік тому
@@kleeo83 You're right, what's changis is the camera position, or that's what I think it looks like now. But I also meantabout the "tensile tool" used. In this case are the big plane circle used by the press, and the changing position clamp on the other side of the wrench. And talking about the lever ratio changing because of the press position, the actual factor that is important here is the angle between the lever and the press: when usin a lever is not the same appliying 1000N at 90 degrees with the lever, than applying it with 70 degrees (with 90 degrees all force is becoming torque, and with 70 degrees some of the force is torque and some is becoming cutting strength). Sorry for bad english, since I'm not a native speaker and it's difficult to explain without a drawing or some images.
@sojikarasuma5660Рік тому
You explained why I felt doubt with this video.
@ksc7957Рік тому
The 10 dollar one is working just fine for most cases
@haiglispicci3 місяці тому
99,999999% cases
@user-vx4hp4nz1u3 місяці тому
Hahaha! I am an Indian and I worked in the Middle Eastern countries in oilfield services. With German companies they mostly prefer German tools and spares. The U.S companies prefer good tool and spares irrespective of the country of Origin as long as they provide reliable service. However what I found with the U.K companies was that they used to get cheaper spares and keep changing often. Thanks.
@japabikeshop5575Рік тому
Levando em conta que as chaves não são pra força estão ótimos os testes
@robertoflores7818Рік тому
I love these test!. Thanks. :)
@nathanruben3372Рік тому
They are all produced in china. Comedy. China vs. china. Mesauring just how much the brand actually tranferred the money it got for its brand name to the product. Chines produce everything in required qualitiy if they are paid accordingly.
@de_vastator104718 днів тому
Its doesn't work like that. China is big factory but this doesn't make chinese all those things which made in China. If you buying Sony TV you don't call it LG because the main component of it - screen - is made by LG? Right?
@Black_DrakoРік тому
I like the milwaukee, its strong and the handle is all metallic so its very easy to clean. I use Beta and Facom and they're great but the rubber/plastic handle will deteorate with the use and oil stains.
@esp4yuРік тому
Whoever have such strength as the machine that test the wrench must be a VERY Strong man. I would buy the $2 one or old wrench 1970 and it probably last me 20-40 years
@chrls.10932 місяці тому
Hell no, the 2$ will break at the first time you will put some force on it. But the 10$ is enough.
@davesalazar8532Рік тому
That old ratchet had survived through tough times until the owner decides to put to its limit.
@ulx5001Рік тому
Ya era para museo .
@raftonpounder6696Рік тому
Yes. What a sin.
@neilh4729Рік тому
Yeah, it wasn't right to do that to the old wrench. 😥
@QuadMechРік тому
The 'Owner' is the key word here. While you own your opinions, you did NOT own this ratchet.
@raftonpounder6696Рік тому
@@QuadMech still a sin. Just because you own something, it doesn’t mean you should destroy it. If I owned a rare car would you think it was fine to destroy it?
@boznorris527Рік тому
That socket done amazing fair play😮 I'm super surprised that it didn't split under the pressure
@fatihk6391Рік тому
I got exactly the same of that no name 2$, bought in a box with a few more parts for around €15. It worj fine for me for years 👍
@baeruuttehei1393Рік тому
I have a German 'Hazet' 1/2 wrench from the late 80's still going strong! Looks similar to the Würth in the test.
@PSNekoРік тому
Good old hp 916❤️
@baeruuttehei1393Рік тому
@@PSNeko no HP, but it reads 916-SP. Thnx, Lukas, I never knew the type nr, checked it just now for the first time after 30+ years.
@PSNekoРік тому
@@baeruuttehei1393 HP is the new version. I also got the 916-sp. Love it :)
@xaverpindl9729Рік тому
Wenn du damit professionell arbeitest ist Hazet sicher 1. Wahl. Für mich als Gelegenheitsschrauber daheim wäre Makita oder KS allerdings ausreichend. Ist halt einfach nur die Frage des Preis/Leistungs/Gebrauchsverhältnis. Oft billig kaufen ist langfristig so teuer wie 1 x Hazet kaufen Was hier nicht getestet wurde Proxxon. Mein Akkuequipment ist Makita, Handequipment fast ausschließlich Proxxon.
@NetiuMLРік тому
not German, but Nazi
@exomniusРік тому
It's an intetesting test, but as many other, for high torque bolts/nuts I dont use this kind of tool until I have loosed it a bit. For me its much more important how many teeth it has, how is the grip etc.
@kimegekjr59713 місяці тому
That is true. I use a simple breaker bar for high torgue.
Interesting video. They all seem over dimensionsed to be honest. Clearly they can all handle more pressure than they would ever see in daily use. So the winner is probably the lightest.
@manuelluis9106Рік тому
O importante não está só na força de alavanca mas sim na quantidade de trabalho dos carretos internos que conforme o tempo e esforço de desgaste começa a folgar e avaria. Nunca homem algum vai fazer essa força. O desgaste interno é o fator mais importante.
@paulohasegawa3922Рік тому
Concordo com vc. É a durabilidade no dia a dia de trabalho.
@luisfortinichi2500Рік тому
Asi es compa...👍
@victory2115Рік тому
My tools from the 1970s are still going strong thanks. 🤓
@Afahs9932 місяці тому
They're all useful, the $2 is an exception. But at the end its all market competition. Id buy one for $10-$30 max & keep it for generations.
@user-mb4tm1di4zМісяць тому
Lo mejor de esas pruebas fue el tubo y la morsa . Tremendo
@paulohasegawa3922Рік тому
Quem consegue imprimir tanta força na ferramenta assim ? O mais importante nao é sua durabilidade, resistencia ao desgaste?
@JA-rc4uyРік тому
What I want to know is what brand socket that is. For it to not split apart under those pressures is amazing. The only word I can see on that socket is “Forged”. I’ve had other cheaply made sockets spread apart by only using hand power.
@Batholomeos5 місяців тому
The test only shows the load that can be endured. but no one manages to muster this strength. Since I have worked with most of these tools, I can confidently say that the Würth is the one that fits best in the hand and is the best to work with.
@spinoff9852 місяці тому
I'm Japanese, but I didn't know that Makita had manual tools.
@user-dj8ih4vy2jМісяць тому
我是中国人,它是翻出一个元朝的工具吗?😂
@user-mq8qe3dq7iРік тому
Very interesting and useful video.! Congratulations.!!
@frankmartinez7218Рік тому
Good to know the limits of your tools for your safety 😁
@199gSauerkraut3 місяці тому
For Germany: "Hazet" is THE number one for wrenches. A special brand for mechanics. Würth is german too, but more an allround seller.
@avramgojic8810Місяць тому
Stahlwile?Dowidat, Gedore,Usag,Facom,Unior?
@hexacamprojectМісяць тому
Facom France
@Yep1900Рік тому
This is all about longevity and precision tool 🔧 good 👍 video
@claudiofernandez9263Рік тому
Lo mejor de esas pruebas fue el tubo y la morsa . Tremendo aguante
@clutchnshift1Рік тому
I guess I’m buying Milwaukee from now on! A follow-up video, part 2, demonstrating Crasftsman, Husky, Kobalt, Matco, Mac Tools, Blue-Point & Snap-On ratchets.
@b79holmesРік тому
Yes we all need to see Craftsmen & Snap-On. Craftsmen isn't what it used to be so I bought my first Snap-on. Cost as much off the Snap-on truck as a very big Craftsmen set. I think S.O. is much better than C. but I'd like to see the test.
@mikekelly5869Рік тому
Will you ever put 500kg on it?
@clutchnshift1Рік тому
Lol, no, never. But with a possible lifespan of 80 years, life is short, so I would like to know which wrench will outlast me by a thousand years and then some. Just enjoy! On a side note, I have had a cheap ratchet wrench shear on me...I clearly outlasted that one.
@dennismark6814Рік тому
Good review, testing method seemed quite consistent. Any of these rachets would work for me with the exception of the $2 No name rachet. 65 Kg of force is around 100ft-lbs (dependent on handle length), so I could break that. On Average, all the rachets broke around 1000 ft-lbs (+/-) except no name. Don't know about you but no nut I turn is torqued to 1000 ft-lbs, and even if it was, I don't have the physical strength to turn it let alone break it. It is after all, still a hand tool. The big difference would be the useability with the increased number of racheting teeth. The Wurth seems like a good balance between cost and number of teeth. For most home type applications, even the Fosage would last me a lifetime.
@alcerz984Рік тому
Pura cheater bar on it and ill bet you'll break em
@pewpew9040Рік тому
@工业党驻油管代表处 不顺滑,差得太远。对我十块钱的也还行。够用不是特别烂。
@niakoi7960Рік тому
You're wrong in your conversions. 65 kg is roughly 650 Nm (Newton-meters), which is about 480 lbf (pound-feet) of torque. This is more than most car engines produce and way, *way* more than you can do with bare hands. You would need either to step on the ratchet (if you turn vertically), or use a much longer lever to produce that torque. So even the $2 ratchet does the job for like 95% of everyday uses. Nevertheless, personally I would opt for the Würth or the Makita.
@lmeza1983Рік тому
100 pounds is not even close to 65 kgs.. 65 kgs is the weight of an average chubby girl.
@steve00alt70Рік тому
You could break it with your hand?
@benthekeeshond5452 місяці тому
snap on? mac tools? matco? Can you test the above wrenches?
@husaamfaisal46489 місяців тому
عمل رائع جدا ❤ اشكرك
@alfredbernal8603Рік тому
Awesome test!
@firet1017 місяців тому
I'm not going to lie. Part of me was hoping that 70s wrench would show all the others up
@khatokhato93508 місяців тому
I was using no name ratchet. It served me a good job, unless I applied on with the weight of 70 kg, it cracked mechanism of the ratchet is damaged, it rotates freely in any direction.
@madcannagrow2833Рік тому
As a heavy duty diesel tech Ill tell you Ive broken a few 1/2” snap-on and mac tools ratchets. Granted I was using a cheater bar to try and break some really tough bolts free. Ive never broken a 3/8 drive ratchet with my hand it definitely takes extra leverage.
@nickfema87Рік тому
you should work with german tools, dont play...
@juanfo7307Рік тому
Any self respecting "heavy duty diesel tech" should know the difference and never use a cheater on a ratchet.
@nickfema87Рік тому
@@juanfo7307 heavy duty diesel tech? wow. i didnt know, the US are so stupid....Play again.....
@madcannagrow2833Рік тому
@@juanfo7307 as a good diesel tech you should know 1/2 drives have smaller profiles than a 3/4 drive and some times you gotta do what you gotta do to get the job done. Thats why I buy quality tools because they have life time warranty and will just get it fixed/swapped out when my tool guy comes. Lol Ive been doing this over 13 years If its in a semi truck Ive done it
@madcannagrow2833Рік тому
@@juanfo7307 and breaker bars break just like ratchets, and yes Ive heated bolts red hot to break em loose but you can’t always use the torch. How long have you been working with tools? Since you know it all apparently
@jackripper1134Рік тому
You should try some of those old russian wrenches. Made in sssr.
@elclub3746Рік тому
Más importante es la durabilidad Interna de la herramienta
@jasoncowling998Рік тому
I was expecting the old one to do much better. Things were made much more durable back then
@cesarcolmenares2129Рік тому
Pruebas de torsión con diferentes marcas de palancas 👍
@disklamerРік тому
70’s: Jamming, but useable. Gotta love the 70’s.
@micahthezilla9432Рік тому
They don’t make em like they used to, huh?
@UltimateSeduction2 місяці тому
The 70's was all about jamming 😊
@ivancooper9816Рік тому
O bocal é super forte!Sobreviveu a todas as chaves
@justavillainГодину тому
I don’t know about the German one but all the others are Chinese owned or sourced. Makita is Japanese owned but the products come out of China and they tell you that. The difference is they mandate better quality from the factories.
@josetrigueiro59789 місяців тому
Hey! That noname socket was the first one I bought and I loved it! It was excellent for working in tight spaces. Unfortunately, at the expense of using it in strenuous tightening, I ended up damaging it, but I would buy another one like it, without hesitation, if I found it on sale again. The other sockets I own are of much better quality, but none of them are as small and as handy for tight areas.
@primoziskra6394Рік тому
If you are strong enough to break any of those you don't need a wrench. Milwaukee don't have safety mechanism in square so that's why it hold the most.
@rylangstonРік тому
That's right. See how it flew off. Could be lethal damage if not taken care of.
@lustisch100Рік тому
The Würth Wrench is NOT Made in Germany, so its just a wrench with a german brand name.
@333ugРік тому
Correct. Würth Zebra is made in Taiwan. This one here is new and Not availible here in Germany.
@robinhood768Рік тому
in deutschland benutzen alle makita
@lustisch100Рік тому
@@robinhood768 Nö. Ich z.B. Wera oder PB Swiss.
@hansjurgenheinemann246Рік тому
Warum nicht mal ne Ganzstahl Ausführung von Stahlwille, Hazet oder Gedore...? Das der Milwaukee 4 Kant mehr aushält liegt einzig daran das es Vollmaterial war und keine Bohrung hatte wie die anderen Probanden.
@petersdraggonРік тому
Milwaukee for the win! That's a buttload in pounds. Most did far better than I would have guessed.
@iPlayOnSpica5 місяців тому
I would've liked to know the distance between the socket and the hydraulic press so we can also see how much torque was applied, not just the raw force.
@gersonroa79974 місяці тому
excelente prueba, en mi opinión lo mejor por experiencia es japonés y americano....!!!!
@skylined5534Рік тому
Cool test! I was quite surprised at how much abuse that 2 dollar ratchet took to be honest!
@ericg4915Рік тому
It only made it to 50 that's nothing. I've broken so many of those things. It's probably equivalent to like 100-200 Newton meters of torque
@nebojsasinjkevic1358Рік тому
What is cool here? Destroying good tools for ...what? Nothing.
@dimitrisgoktsis570210 місяців тому
@@nebojsasinjkevic1358totally agree 😊!
@RlipРік тому
I have the no name one! It’s cheap but I’ve had it forever for those low torque and odd ball job, I keep it in my “yard tools” pile aka don’t care if it goes missing etc
@alanolley7286Рік тому
i have a stack of them all broken ,given to me by friends ,I turn them into pin punches, cut the head off ,put it on the lathe turn to required diameter
@jamesschenkМісяць тому
Its great to see america still makes the best tools
@jayc34200926 днів тому
They're made in China tho
@kimegekjr59713 місяці тому
The head of the Milwaukee tool seems larger, which could be a problem working in cramp areas. One thing that is not addressed is the length from the center of the socket to where the press pushes at the wrench. The longer this length is, the more torgue is put on the wrench given a certain kg push. The Milwaukee tool seems longer thus the press seems to push further away from the center of the socket, so it has taken even a higher torgue than the other wrenches... But that price is not for me.
@ThinkAboutMyCommentРік тому
For those of you talking about human strength. It’s common practice to use leverage or to hit the wrench so this is useful. Also heavy pressure in a short time can indicate over a long time. Also
@derektoronto14 місяці тому
Assuming you didn’t loose it, stolen or borrowed! Lol
@brianriffel8296Рік тому
You have become Milwaukee's best salesperson.
@Nancyx7082 місяці тому
still made in China
@dieternagel59932 місяці тому
Diese Ratsche sollte man einmal mit Produkten von Hazet oder Gedore vergleichen!
@AJK967Рік тому
My thought is, I’d rather have a wrench that had the drive square fail, as opposed to the mechanism. Two reasons; the drive square would (or should be) an easily) replaceable, and secondly it gives me more confidence in a high use item that the ratchet will hold up.
@felixprime82913 місяці тому
Yea that’s what I was thinking, makes the German and Japanese ones the better choice as they don’t have an integral square (and are also cheaper than the American one). It’s why deliberate points of failure can be very useful as safety features. Actually goes way back to the Romans, they mass produced javelins and designed the tips to be replaceable and fail, this mean the javelins in most cases could be repaired easily just by replacing the tip, prevented enemies from picking up their javelins and throwing them back to the romans, also means that they got stuck in enemy shields, making them heavy and much less useful, forcing enemies to ditch them and neutralising shield walls.
@stephenhumble76273 місяці тому
Drive square is not a standard part it is probably a casting with integral teeth and unique to each brand and model. It is probably not readily available as a spare so not easy or cheap to replace.
@hellhound138910 місяців тому
I've got a ratchet my father had that was from the 70s, it has lasted all the time but I have to keep replacing sockets because they keep shattering except the Pittsburgh impact sockets
@jorgecardozo3681Рік тому
In general, all went well, because how much leverage can a person exert in a squeeze? La diferencia para mí será la vida útil de cada uno . Bueno un fuerte abrazo para todos Es una de mis herramientas preferida 🇺🇾
@busted-sf2809Рік тому
if you would know... ukposts.info/have/v-deo/gqJ8hYiFm4J_o40.html
@jonathanpope3189Рік тому
A 500 kg person could break all of them
@titaniumtinman2809Рік тому
An informative video. I'd like to know, as a comparison, what the comparative maximum torque a human can deliver on one of these ratchet-handles?
@waitakiorchards743Рік тому
Depends how long your piece of pipe is.
@titaniumtinman2809Рік тому
@@waitakiorchards743 Yeah...no...at the extension of the press used in the video, naturally 🥴. Of course my question was poorly worded, and I actually want to know whether the worst rachet handle could be broken by a human without extending the lever.....which I suspect you knew 🤨.
@scorchedearth1451Рік тому
@@titaniumtinman2809 You could put your weight on it, or you could use your muscles. But you'll never be able to snap the square off or wreck the mechanism.
@truth_s1561Рік тому
100kg. If your weight is 100 kg. Otherwise you fly.
@truth_s1561Рік тому
Means ...ca. 250 Nm.
@bass305-HCCAРік тому
Milwaukee for the win. Nice tool 🔧
@agusedyanto332410 днів тому
There are no extraordinary items with low value for money😂!
@benpavlovic99223 місяці тому
Depends on how far down the handle you apply the pressure
@FabioSilva-br1kzРік тому
Bom meus amigos, eu trabalhando na mecânica de aviação com ferramentas de fabricação americana e de fato elas são extremamente boas de trabalho seguras e forte o bastante pra toda vida. O vídeo é muito bom 😁 Gostei bastante e mandei pra meus amigos mecânico e que ama mecânica
@paulotrigo1Рік тому
As ferramentas desse vídeo são todas chinesas.
@memnochdkРік тому
São chinesas mas as marcas não. Mesmo que sejam produzidas na China elas seguem projeto e especificações dos países de origem. Seria a mesma coisa que dizer que o Iphone é chinês porque é fabricado na China.
@XxGearxРік тому
@@memnochdk Eu nasci no Brasil mas meus pais me planejaram e fizeram em uma viagem no canadá então sou Canadense? kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
@memnochdkРік тому
@@XxGearx ué vc é uma ferramenta? Rsss. Mas a lógica contrária pode ser usada, Seus pais são brasileiros , te planejam no Brasil, você é concebido e nasce na China, vcs voltam pro Brasil, vc é chinês? Rsss
@lucarambaldi2731Рік тому
@@paulotrigo1 NON CREDO SIA VERO
@timberlineoffroadРік тому
Thank you can you please test Snap-on, Matco, and Mac brands? These are the top 3 USA professional brands.
@titaniopotenza5163Рік тому
yeah.. and also the German brands like Stahlwille, Gedore, Hazet and Elora. or japanese brands like KTC, Tone and Koken
@ca4wqp9 годин тому
Llege a la conclusión de que el force es un excelente dado sin dañarse
@gavinlew827322 дні тому
I'm sold for that Milwaukee wrench! Proudly made in the USA!
@diegofernando5549Рік тому
No teste vemos que o preço é coerente com a qualidade
@HugoMNFРік тому
Verdade.
@sergiopene4169Рік тому
Para uso doméstico 385 kg é bastante, pelo que a Chinesa é melhor no custo-benefício.
@MrF0obarРік тому
By the way: Würth is a German company, but they do not make their own tools. They buy them from all over the world and just put their name on. So the Würth ratchet in the video might actually be a Chinese one (although a good one). 🤣
@sktang7145Рік тому
Imagine the profits 😬
@s.m5174Рік тому
Yes, he should test hazet for Germany
@MD-gr6soРік тому
@@s.m5174 these ratchets are no used for screws with a diameter of 30 mm. I work as a scaffolder and we use Mannesmann ratchets. They are for 19 mm and 32 mm screws and weigh 1 kg. These ratchets in the video are for small screws.
@s.m5174Рік тому
@@MD-gr6so what do you mean? We use it every day
@omegaedronРік тому
Los datos son impresos ya que la distancia desde el punto de apoyo hasta el mango varía lo que causa una diferencia en la fuerza torque, eso hay que tenerlo en cuenta y mucho
@pp-bb6jj28 днів тому
Never imagined something made in America would be the best quality.
@EnviXR81Рік тому
I want a set of those sockets!!
@gadgetg9479Рік тому
Force is the brand I have them in 3/8 3/4 1/2 good set they have a nice grip that let’s you turn stiff bolts out by hand and note he didn’t put the ratchet in the press!!!!
@FundyisleLegacyРік тому
Wonder how much force is on those squares after you factor leverage on top of the weight
@doubl33Ace2 місяці тому
I like harbor freight ratchet. Easy to warranty, and they always have them in stock.
@daewoopartsРік тому
Should test the warranty on the wrenches & see if they replace or repair them 😁
@patrickbodine1300Рік тому
Except, of course, the Chinesium one. Just sayin'.
@amykluge9281Рік тому
Take the Milwaukee wrench back and they will as long as there is no pipe marks on it
@mehanosavralasaurus9553Рік тому
Хотелось бы видео на испытание ключей накидных с храповым механизмом
@pinkysgarage2779Рік тому
Man I've got a Quinn from harbor freight would love to see those get tested it breaks snap-on chrome sockets like nothing but their 8MM 1/4" drive socket can take a 2 hour beating putting in new studs into a rusty manifold with a 1/2" battery impact China or not super tough
@sergioriosgomez381828 днів тому
Copa Force, lo mejor qué he visto😮
@jaquesadvРік тому
Thanks for the amazing video!!! Tip: Next time you make a video, make sure you clean the lens of your camera before shooting. 😅
@MultiCarlioРік тому
I don't appreciate when old ones are damaged for test..... :(
@Fuerte-ClaroРік тому
😁
@SamFBMРік тому
their purpose is done , time to send them out one last time + everything can be fixed with enough money
@RoseberryTimothyРік тому
Me either.... I cringed at that. It was a nice design, I thought, as well
@raiyu1985Рік тому
@@SamFBM Purpose is done? WTF?
@raiyu1985Рік тому
@@SamFBM Not ever gonna waste money on tools. Flea Market is packaged with old and sturdier tools.
@AstrophageyepМісяць тому
All of them are good, so go for the cheap and light ones🎉
@frankaguiar2829Рік тому
Lo que sorprende es el dado force que resistió sin barrerce 👍
@ramoncarrillo3339Рік тому
La mejor es force ...le hago palanca con un caño de un metro y no arruga
@Ale.BeatleРік тому
Fija que es vanadio cromo. Esas.aguantan hasta una bomba nuclear.
@TimmehhhhhhРік тому
Google translate has still room for improvement i see... 🤔
@TheCrankshaftRotatorРік тому
Conclusion: A mid - class ratchet will do its job, like almost always. Thanks, very interesting!
@hakimmohamad6216Рік тому
The amount of play and the corrosion resistance could also be factors to take into consideration.
@clarkgriswald1768Рік тому
These are ALL. Cheap ratchets ! A good ratchet cost $300
@ThatGoatРік тому
@@clarkgriswald1768 What in the world does a $300 ratchet (in the same size class as these) can do any better? Does it make effing coffee?!
@paulrevere8581Рік тому
@@ThatGoat has a nice fat handle ,so it can be used at play time
@user-bw4jm1bv1iРік тому
@@hakimmohamad6216 ergonomics would be a good consideration too.
@Rahimitheking25 днів тому
Thanks China u r the best with such a great stocks and so cheap naw I can save more money than 2010 and 2018