6 Underrated DIY Tools

The rolled head makes leverage in tight places. Kyle Smith

There’s grease on your elbow. It stands as proof you’re literally elbow deep in your project car, and it’s at this point that you realize all your favorite tools are still in the toolbox. Instead, the floor and fender wells hold a wide variety of the tools you actually use, not just the ones you enjoy using.

It’s these tools that get the job done. They may not be flashy, pricey, or have a good story, but these are the chunks of steel and plastic that make our lives easier. They’re the unsung heroes of the toolbox, or at least some of the under-appreciated mainstays.

Ratcheting wrenches

combination wrenches in drawer
Kyle Smith

The open end wrench is an indispensable staple of working with most types of threaded fasteners. Sockets and ratchets make the work easier, but the slim profile and extremely durable nature make wrenches critical for some tasks. Wrenches are a necessity, but ask anyone that has been forced to spend 20 minutes removing a three-inch bolt an 1/8th of a turn at a time and it’s easy to see why ratcheting wrenches can be unsung heroes of both disassembly and assembly. Switchable ratcheting wrenches make life even easier and prevent that situation where you use a ratchet to back off a bolt only to pinch the wrench against another part and be left with an even more frustrating situation.

Center punch

Need to drill a hole? You’d likely reach for your drill and bits, but those with experience know to grab a center punch as well. A small dent in the center of your planned hole will help keep a drill bit from wandering off course. Upgrade to an automatic center punch and you’ll likely never look back, but even years after doing so myself, I still have multiple “regular” center punches that get frequent use.

Small pry bar

Need help aligning bolt holes or popping two corroded pieces apart? You don’t need tons of persuasion, but just a bit more than can be imparted with bare hands. That’s the time a small pry bar comes out. My personal favorite has this spud end that can be used to aid in alignment and easy holding of parts during assembly. Everyone benefits from a little extra leverage, and despite their lack of size, these little bars provide just that.

Little hammers

The big hammer gets all the love from just about anyone who has been forced to deal with the corrosion and otherwise stuck hardware and parts that come pre-installed on every project car. Big hammers impart big forces though, and while a skilled DIY’er knows how to swing a large hammer softly, there is a time and place for the little hammers too.

Big hammers sometimes just don’t fit the work area or put a little too much smack on relatively delicate parts. A “big” hit with a small hammer can put just enough shock into part to break things loose while also being perfectly sized to cut gaskets. Little hammers hide in most toolboxes.

Wire wheels

When talking about projects, what most gloss over is the amount of time spent with the project apart, cleaning and dressing each individual piece so that when everything goes back together it will fit correctly. Just a small amount of rust or corrosion can bind threads or prevent good fit of mated parts. A wire wheel makes quick work of removing surface scale and junk. While a bench grinder with a nice 8″ wire wheel is great, even simple cordless drill wire wheels can be enough to solve a lot of problems.

Picks

picks on workbench
Kyle Smith

For how big our cars, trucks, and other project vehicles are, there are a shocking number of tiny parts. Little o-rings or orifices that even dainty digits can’t investigate or grasp are easily handled by a pick. While tempting to ask your dental hygienist to slip you some spares, ones from your favorite tool company are likely a better choice—the ones designed for dental work tend to be more fragile. Maybe I need that cleaning though…

Regardless, even a humble tool chest is filled with literally hundreds of tools, and some get all the praise while others sit patiently waiting to be the star of the day before disappearing into storage once again. Have a favorite underrated tool? Tell us about it in the comments below.

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Comments

    My favorite unhearlded tool is a 12 year old kid wanting to learn. They are an extra set of hands, light holder, switch or ignition key activator, tool fetcher…and sponge for all of my stories. Indispensable and unhearlded!

    Amen to that – mine is 14 year old grandson – indispensable at times and easier/more willing than his grandmother LOL.

    Harbor Freight but I also go to farm auctions – surprising what kind of tools you can find and usually reasonably priced.

    You can get the carpenters’ version at Home Depot or Lowes. The main difference is the prying surfaces are slotted to use to pull nails.

    Nut and Bolt Thread Checker (Inch & Metric), 8 oz. Stubby Ball Peen Hammer, tap & die set, dial caliper, cell phone camera

    I also use my thread cleaning set (SAE & Metric) much more than I use my tap & die sets. They allow me to clean old threads in parts, etc without worrying about cross threading something with a tap or die.
    Good call on the dial caliper (inch and mm) and very good call on the cell phone, particularly when taking things apart.

    Thread cleaning files. Throw that rusty bolt in the lathe (or drill press if it will fit) and it’s ready to use quicker than getting the correct die out of the set.

    My ever-present, must-have “tool” is the small (3.5″) LED flashlight. I have them scattered around my shop and one in each of my cars. The Harbor Fright units sell for less than $3 for a pair of them, including batteries. They are really bright and run on AAA batteries. I keep one on my tool cart when I am working on or inspecting my cars and they can easily illuminate a lot of very small places to see what needs to be done that a drop light can’t get to.

    Dental pics are my new locking pliers. They have so many uses, especially as I get older and don’t have the dexterity in my fingers for micro work like putting gaskets in the right place.

    I have a magnet on the end of an expanding rod, works great for recovering bolts, washers and nuts that get dropped into hard to reach or see places when you’re working on a vehicle. Also good for retrieving hardware that falls or rolls under the vehicle you are working on.

    Curved needle nose pliers. They are great for pulling fuses without having your hand blocking what you are trying to see.

    Pullers of various types, spring loaded flexible small parts grabber for those dropped little pieces in hard to reach places, magnetic flashlight and headlamps.

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