Hey gang. I’m building up my bike repair tool set, and it looks like I’ll either need to get a set (or several popularly sized) cone wrenches and/or an adjustable wrench with a thin profile.
I figure an adjustable wrench could help service anything from axles/hubs to headsets, which cone wrenches are limited to the size(s) you’ve got.
Any advantage/disadvantage of one over the other that I might not realize?
I’ve never seen an adjustable wrench that was thin enough to do many of those jobs. Maybe you could grind a standard one thin enough. A little tricky.
Just to throw it out there, so you don’t think something like this (2mm thickness) would work?
Tools and fasteners with these thin flats are delicate, because of the high contact pressures resulting from thin wrenches. Exactly the conditions you don’t want to use an adjustable wrench for. Instead, only buy the wrenches for the parts you have, and build out your set over time. Also, I’m not sure I’d trust a normal size adjustable wrench off Amazon, much less a specialty tool like that.
That’s good advice. I think I’ll measure the parts I have and just order tools one at a time. The sets don’t seem to save money anyway, so that’s fine.
I’m a fan of adjustable wrenches, but haven’t used a thin profile one at all. I think you’re probably right about them being less than ideal for this application, but I may just get one for those “what if” situations.
Have you seen the knipex parallel jaw pliers? They’ve completely replaced all but my largest crescent style adjustable: https://www.knipex.com/products/pipe-wrenches-and-water-pump-pliers/pliers-wrenches-pliers-and-a-wrench-in-a-single-tool/pliers-wrenches-pliers-and-wrench-single-tool/8603180
I’ve got a small knipex, and love it! I may need to get a larger one like that 😁