We use Pedros in the shop, great and very durable. Wish the handles
weren't yellow tho, they get dirty.
Many years ago a career bicycle mechanic recommended I buy a set of
Kingsbridge cone wrenches. I've never been sorry. Are these even still
available?
jeverett3<AT>earthlink<DOT>net http://home.earthlink.net/~jeverett3
I discovered with horror my boyfriend using my 15mm Pedros cone spanner the
other week to tighten up rear wheel track axle nuts to a "Nggggyyhaaaa"
tightness on the human torque wrench scale. I yelled at him that he'll
wreck it (the spanner) - and he told me that he's been using it for that
purpose for several weeks. They're plently strong enough! Never used the
Park ones, can't compare.
>I have heard good things about the Park laser cut cone wrenches and would
The laser-cut wrenches work just fine from the standpoint of fitting
the nuts and not deforming, but their narrow sides are hard on the
fingers. The Pedro's are more pleasant to use.
--
Typoes are a feature, not a bug.
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I've never been very happy with most Park products. I have 1 "laser
cut" that gets occasional use centering an old set of Record brakes.
Other levels of Park cone wrenches have either been poorly fininshed
(and thus don't quite go in between the washers to get to the cone), or
they bend a wee bit and thus become a wee bit bigger than they say they are.
A buddy of mine used to be at Trek. They'd go through Park wrenches
like they were disposable. A Snap-On guy would make regular
appearances. My buddy sat down with the Snap-On guy and discussed
things. This is the origin of Trek's Wrench Force line of tools. Same
buddy says Snap-On also makes several of Pedro's tools as well.
OTOH, I have some Sugino cone wrenches that are going on 30 years old
now, and they're great!