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FWIW, Snap-On wrenches and sockets have offered that same
feature - off-point bearing "flank drive" - for over 20 years.
Dale R.
Donald Willard Garrett wrote:
Years ago, I
stayed up watching one of those infomercial shows, and made what turned
out to be my favorite tool purchase ever. When they got stolen from my
car, I bought the deluxe set, and like it even better. Rather than
turning the corners of the nut, they cam onto the face, meaning:
1. each socket / wrench does both metric and the nearest fraction of
an inch
2. you can't strip a nut or bolt head with them
3. you can turn a nut or bolt that's stripped almost round
Additionally, I've used (abused) them with cheater bars, and am
confident that anything I can get a socket on I can either crack or
twist off the bolt (like the head bolt on a Chevy 454--oops). I've
pulled engines etc. foreign and domestic, and handed them over on
numerous occasions to jobsite crews when regular hex wrenches fail
(tool sacrifice--watched guys hang from them and hit them with hammers)
with zero failures.
There you have it, of all the tools I own, the only ones I'd ever do a
commercial for!
http://www.mitools.com/
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