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RST Engineering
November 11th 06, 12:31 AM
That's WRENCH, not wench you dirty minded garlic guzzling cigar chomping old
pharts.

I've got a very thin (0.050") 3/8" wrench that has been in my toolbox since
Eisenhower. Over the years, it has rounded its jaws off to the point where
it is fairly useless. The maker of the wrench, one H.H. Smith in Brooklyn
NY no longer makes this tool.

Other than taking an ignition wrench and grinding it down, does anybody have
a source for stamped thin metal wrenches?

Jim

Dave[_5_]
November 11th 06, 05:03 AM
> Other than taking an ignition wrench and grinding it down, does anybody have
> a source for stamped thin metal wrenches?

Try a bike shop. I have a couple of thin wrenches that I picked up in
conjunction with biking - though I don't recall the reason why those
particular ones were chosen (maybe they were cheap). The ones I have
are metric - inch equivalents may not be readily available. OTOH I have
often used the closest metric size on inch-size nuts (whatever I can
lay my hand on first).

Dave Johnson

clare at snyder.on.ca
November 11th 06, 05:15 AM
On 10 Nov 2006 21:03:54 -0800, "Dave" > wrote:

>> Other than taking an ignition wrench and grinding it down, does anybody have
>> a source for stamped thin metal wrenches?
>
>Try a bike shop. I have a couple of thin wrenches that I picked up in
>conjunction with biking - though I don't recall the reason why those
>particular ones were chosen (maybe they were cheap). The ones I have
>are metric - inch equivalents may not be readily available. OTOH I have
>often used the closest metric size on inch-size nuts (whatever I can
>lay my hand on first).
>
>Dave Johnson
You sure you are not talking about a "tappet wrench"? Made for
adjusting valves on old flat-head engines, they are quite thin.

--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com

flybynightkarmarepair
November 11th 06, 06:48 AM
RST Engineering wrote:

> Other than taking an ignition wrench and grinding it down, does anybody have
> a source for stamped thin metal wrenches?
>
> Jim

http://www.etoolcart.com/index.asp?PageAction=VIEWPROD&ProdID=7153

Dave[_5_]
November 11th 06, 11:02 PM
You sure you are not talking about a "tappet wrench"? Made for
> adjusting valves on old flat-head engines, they are quite thin.
>
I'm sure. Some years ago I was out biking without tools, and needed to
adjust something. There happened to be a bike store nearby, and the
sheet metal wrenches were what I bought. I believe that they are made
thin to be as light as possible - intended to be carried along while
biking.

Dave Johnson

Dave[_5_]
November 11th 06, 11:02 PM
You sure you are not talking about a "tappet wrench"? Made for
> adjusting valves on old flat-head engines, they are quite thin.
>
I'm sure. Some years ago I was out biking without tools, and needed to
adjust something. There happened to be a bike store nearby, and the
sheet metal wrenches were what I bought. I believe that they are made
thin to be as light as possible - intended to be carried along while
biking.

Dave Johnson

clare at snyder.on.ca
November 12th 06, 12:50 AM
On 11 Nov 2006 15:02:05 -0800, "Dave" > wrote:

>
> You sure you are not talking about a "tappet wrench"? Made for
>> adjusting valves on old flat-head engines, they are quite thin.
>>
>I'm sure. Some years ago I was out biking without tools, and needed to
>adjust something. There happened to be a bike store nearby, and the
>sheet metal wrenches were what I bought. I believe that they are made
>thin to be as light as possible - intended to be carried along while
>biking.
>
>Dave Johnson
You are looking for a bike wrench - (useless as most of them are)

--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com

JKimmel
November 12th 06, 11:34 PM
Dave wrote:
> You sure you are not talking about a "tappet wrench"? Made for
>
>>adjusting valves on old flat-head engines, they are quite thin.
>>
>
> I'm sure. Some years ago I was out biking without tools, and needed to
> adjust something. There happened to be a bike store nearby, and the
> sheet metal wrenches were what I bought. I believe that they are made
> thin to be as light as possible - intended to be carried along while
> biking.
>
> Dave Johnson
>

The thin wrenches used on bicycles are called "cone wrenches". They are
used to adjust wheel bearing races.
--
J Kimmel

www.metalinnovations.com

"Cuius testiculos habes, habeas cardia et cerebellum." - When you have
their full attention in your grip, their hearts and minds will follow.

Peter Dohm
November 16th 06, 04:24 PM
> That's WRENCH, not wench you dirty minded garlic guzzling cigar chomping
old
> pharts.
>
> I've got a very thin (0.050") 3/8" wrench that has been in my toolbox
since
> Eisenhower. Over the years, it has rounded its jaws off to the point
where
> it is fairly useless. The maker of the wrench, one H.H. Smith in Brooklyn
> NY no longer makes this tool.
>
> Other than taking an ignition wrench and grinding it down, does anybody
have
> a source for stamped thin metal wrenches?
>
> Jim
>
>
I don't know where to buy a good one; but if you do have to grind down an
ignition wrench, which is quite likely, be sure to use plenty of coolant!

Otherwise the result is a very soft wrench, which is little better than
those stamped and punched things that are sold for emergency repair of
bicycles. :-(

Peter

Cy Galley
November 17th 06, 03:48 AM
They make some very nice thin tool steel wrenches for Bikes. And they are
NOT for emergency use. Check at your local bike shop and look at the bikes
for $5 to 10 thousand dollars.


--
Cy Galley - Webmaster www.qcbc.org

"Peter Dohm" > wrote in message
...
>> That's WRENCH, not wench you dirty minded garlic guzzling cigar chomping
> old
>> pharts.
>>
>> I've got a very thin (0.050") 3/8" wrench that has been in my toolbox
> since
>> Eisenhower. Over the years, it has rounded its jaws off to the point
> where
>> it is fairly useless. The maker of the wrench, one H.H. Smith in
>> Brooklyn
>> NY no longer makes this tool.
>>
>> Other than taking an ignition wrench and grinding it down, does anybody
> have
>> a source for stamped thin metal wrenches?
>>
>> Jim
>>
>>
> I don't know where to buy a good one; but if you do have to grind down an
> ignition wrench, which is quite likely, be sure to use plenty of coolant!
>
> Otherwise the result is a very soft wrench, which is little better than
> those stamped and punched things that are sold for emergency repair of
> bicycles. :-(
>
> Peter
>
>

Peter Dohm
November 17th 06, 12:52 PM
Sheesh! Airplanes are apparently a bargain....

Thanks for the information about a second class of bike wrenches.

Peter


"Cy Galley" > wrote in message
news:nia7h.148036$aJ.132191@attbi_s21...
> They make some very nice thin tool steel wrenches for Bikes. And they are
> NOT for emergency use. Check at your local bike shop and look at the bikes
> for $5 to 10 thousand dollars.
>
>
> --
> Cy Galley - Webmaster www.qcbc.org
>
> "Peter Dohm" > wrote in message
> ...
> >> That's WRENCH, not wench you dirty minded garlic guzzling cigar
chomping
> > old
> >> pharts.
> >>
> >> I've got a very thin (0.050") 3/8" wrench that has been in my toolbox
> > since
> >> Eisenhower. Over the years, it has rounded its jaws off to the point
> > where
> >> it is fairly useless. The maker of the wrench, one H.H. Smith in
> >> Brooklyn
> >> NY no longer makes this tool.
> >>
> >> Other than taking an ignition wrench and grinding it down, does anybody
> > have
> >> a source for stamped thin metal wrenches?
> >>
> >> Jim
> >>
> >>
> > I don't know where to buy a good one; but if you do have to grind down
an
> > ignition wrench, which is quite likely, be sure to use plenty of
coolant!
> >
> > Otherwise the result is a very soft wrench, which is little better than
> > those stamped and punched things that are sold for emergency repair of
> > bicycles. :-(
> >
> > Peter
> >
> >
>
>

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