Q:

Your most useful hand tools

Any suggestions on putting together a good quality set of hand tools for tinkering on my airguns. I know many of you are craftsman with years of experience, and a lifetime of collecting cherished machines. I don,t think I,ll ever reach that level but any smaller hand tools you can,t live without?

Regards LarryW 🙄

Mods/Machinists

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Viewing 8 replies - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)

i’d hafta say get a good dremel and make an attachment to affix to a lathe

My wife being full blood German told me to tell you that it’s Goot -n- tite! 😆 Now myself being half German and half Cherokee, I’ll take good any day. Tight is a bonus! 🙄

I picked up some Snap-On ball end allen wrenches with screw driver handles. Even the little 3/32″ don’t snap off. I’ve been using the same one for years now. All the others I used snapped easily!

And don’t forget to torque everything to German spec: “gut-an-tight”

Oh, I like the Wheeler Engineering Bench Block for protecting and backing up the frame when punching the pins.

midwayUSA has it for $20.49.

Oh, and I use black permanent marker for quick touchups and Birchwood Casey, Aluminum Black is for serious touch-up of scratched and marred areas “QUICKLY”:!: Use sparingly, it is potent.

Thanks for you suggestions, HF grabber and a nice soft brass punch make good sense. Hex keys and the correct drivers I have. I guess I just need to tear things apart for a little preventive maintenance. Brazing rod, you mount it in some kind of holder to give so stability?

Regards LarryW 🙄 🙄

True That!!! 😉 😆 those grabbers save my ass in the shop all the time. 😆

Yep, good Hex keys and screw drivers. And a little brass punch made from 3/32 brass brazing rod for punching the pins out of the frame.

Knife

😆 my most used tool is my cheapo HF ol’ foggy grabber pickup tool 💡

I have 3+ :mrgreen:

precision hex keys and screwdrivers

Viewing 8 replies - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)

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