7 more old tools almost no one uses anymore

Getty Images

The evolution of the automobile has been non-stop from the moment Karl Benz first threw the flywheel ’round on his Patent Motorwagen. The technology, process, and tools needed to keep cars running have evolved from the adjustable spanners and flat head screwdrivers to complex, hyper-specific specialized tools that spend more time laying in toolbox drawers than being used. Some old tools have stood the test of time while others have faded from common use.

We are tool hoarders ourselves, and objects designed for utility that are still functional will always have a place in our box but it is interesting to look into the corners of the toolbox and see what tools are getting less and less use over the years. Whether due to an improved design usurping the use of an older tool, or the task a specialty tool was design for becoming less popular due to car construction and use changing, tools evolve as quickly—if not more—than the car itself. Here are seven examples of tools that are no longer the toolbox staples they once were—for better or worse.

Bumper jacks

Ebay bumper jack photo
eBay/littlemsj

In a world of bumper covers, the thought of attaching a lifting mechanism to the exterior of your car and using it to lift the vehicle is some type of strange fever dream. It wasn’t always that way though. Flat tires have been around longer than the automobile and the need to pick up the car followed right along. Bumper jacks are good in concept but the lack of any safety catch or stabilization to keep from tipping over makes them treacherous to use. They still have utility in off-road situations but that can also make use even more dangerous.

Verdict: Keep as a reminder of how far we’ve come.

 

Brake pliers

brake pliers image
Haumec

Somehow in the history of cars, there have been just two types of brakes commonly found behind the wheels: Drum or disc. Drum brakes can provide all the stopping power needed while also wearing like iron thanks to the enclosed and thus relatively debris-free nature of the design. That same design also has a handful of tension springs stretched carefully over small studs that can be serviced with groove-joint pliers and a screwdriver, but there are also brake pliers that rose and slipped from popularity right alongside drum brakes.

With modern materials and the relatively limited use of drum-brake cars, servicing drums has gotten less common to the point that while special tools can make the job easier it is only marginal and certainly not required.

Verdict: Keep them if you’ve got them but can likely pass if building your toolkit.

 

Growler

Growler electrical tester
eBay/ Diesel fuel test equipment

We aren’t talking about that curmudgeon of a mechanic who seems to only communicate in grunts and growls as the ratchet clicks to remove parts. No, the growler here is used to test the windings of a motor or generator. The armature is placed on a bed that flows alternating current into the windings. Using a ferrous rod to locate the magnetic field that will be created by a short makes for easy diagnostics. The price drop that came with the mass production and parts sharing between various models relegated these to hobby benches or the back room of specialist shops. Since rebuilding motors or alternators has become rare, these are practically a novelty.

Verdict: Keep if you’ve got the space, but often these find problems that are difficult to source parts to fix.

 

Vernier caliper

Vernier Caliper_detail_view
Simon A. Eugster

The increase in affordable precision has been quiet but amazing for at-home DIY projects. Good precision measuring devices used to be limited to the hands of skilled technicians and specialists in machine and fabrication shops. It took skill and training to properly use and read items like the vernier scale on calipers used in fabrication and precision machine work. Then digital calipers entered the market and the prices dropped year after year to the point that now a set of calipers accurate enough for most home use can be had for under $50.

Verdict: Use what you like and what works best for you. Regardless of what that is, be sure to keep any and all precision tools stored carefully to prevent damage.

 

Timing light

mechanic tuning a car engine timing light
Getty Images

When we first wrote about tools that were fading from popularity last year, the comments section lit up with the suggestion that timing lights were left out. It’s been decades since a car rolling off the assembly line featured a tunable distributor, as the ignition is often now controlled by a computer working off data provided by a crankshaft or camshaft position sensor (or both) to control the firing of individual coils for each spark plug and cylinder. Adjusting the timing of the spark in the cylinder is changed with a laptop rather than a wrench and strobe light. Timing lights have been relegated to specialist shops and DIY garages.

Verdict: Keep it if it works, but consider a modern digital light if building a vintage-focused toolset as the features and capability have come a long way since the strobes of old.

 

Point file

Another from the ignition side of things. Even before computerized ignition was the advent of electronic or non-points-based discharge. Long gone are the days of having to swap a set of points on the side of the road or scratch off the char of the small faces to allow the coil to charge. A points file was handy for if or when a condenser would fail or the points would otherwise get crummy enough to not allow enough current through.

Verdict: If one is already in your glovebox, keep it for nostalgia’s sake and just in case. You never know who it might help.

 

Brake lathe or shoe arcing machine

ebay brake lathe
eBay/Herzog Products

Drum brakes often have more swept area compared to disc brakes, but that additional friction material is useless if it is not in contact with the brake surface. The heat retention characteristics of drums can sometimes lead to warping that would previously be cleaned up by “turning” the drums to create a nice concentric surface around the shoes. While drums can still be found on modern cars the drums are often cast so thin that turning them is no longer an option and instead we must skip straight to replacement.

Shoe arcing machines do the same thing as brake lathes but set the radius of the friction material to match that of the drum. It’s critical for good brake performance on some vintage cars but has faded from popularity significantly due to the health concerns of grinding friction materials—especially asbestos.

Verdict: Save if you’ve got the space, or sell to a vintage shop if you don’t. We likely won’t see new versions of these tools made and they so help keep our cars safely going down the road. 

 

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Comments

    I still have a GM points adjusting tool that has a nine inch flex section to make it easier to reach the hex screw. And also in my tune-up box are various specialized carburetor idle mixture adjusting tools, a Jacobs spark plug gap adjusting tool, an Isspro non-contact handheld tachometer, and a spark plug wire tester that looks like a ball point pen, except that it has a groove that is placed over the wire. When the spark occurs, a neon light flashes in the pen body indicating current is passing through. And many, many more old school tools from when dinosaurs walked the earth…

    I fortunately have a 70’s Snap-on vacuum gauge, timing light and tach/dwell meter kit. Need them
    with my 63 Falcon Sprint and 69 Beetle. Good luck finding a handheld dwell meter these days.

    My neighbor gave me a sun machine very similar .The one in the picture except It had a distributor machine for Ford Flathead’s and the 12 Lincoln enginesI made a copy of tool for removing the valve stems and Keepers. It bolted onto the studs and was very easy to use. It took me a couple tries to make them give them to a couple members of the Lincoln car clubHad a grinder for brake shoes that match the drums.

    My 1955 Volkswagen had a square jack socket at the center of gravity under the door on each side of the car. You could lift both wheels on one side safely.

    LOL! Just two years ago I had a set of 1 ton Brake Rotors “turned” at $40.00 total vers. $90.00 ea. replacement it was a deal, brake pedal smooth as glass.

    Re old tools-Timing light. Multi spark electronic ignition distributors can’t be timed with modern timing lights. Old (20 years?) will work. Learned this the expensive way on Pertronix electronic distributor upgrade to 1973 VW Thing. Anyone want to buy a “modern ” timing light? 🙂

    My 2002 Nissan Xterra still requires a timing light for distributor replacement and drum brake tools which I still have.(shoe retainer spring compressor and brake pliers)

    I still use most of these tools. There is however one tool I still own that I have not used since the early 1980s, and am unlikely to ever use again – a punch-in oil-can spout.

    Good one!! The only use I found for mine is to insert it into a pre-punctured oil can, on the display shelf.

    Beat me to that, El Notcho – I was gonna say that the couple I have get used EVERY DAY (as displays on a shelf above a tool cabinet. A bare metal one in a Valvoline can and a yellow painted one in a Pennzoil can. I also have a mini-size one to go into a can of ATF (small enough to fit into the dipstick/fill neck, but have no can to put it in!

    I have the manual vernier calipers, I use them almost daily at home or work. The new “digital” requires a battery, and when you need it most, it’s dead!

    The only tool I can’t use is the bumper jack….my car uses a screw jack that contacts the ground through holes in the floorboards. Another device I use regularly is an air flow measuring tool that allows me to keep my carburetors synchronized.

    Boy I think the author was searching for tools to put on this list. I use my timing light, and calipers all the time. The Auto parts store I work at part time use thee brake lathe all the time!

    Sorry but a couple on this list not many would have anyway. So basically a slow day to make up content. If you have specialty tools and use them then keep them. Most of these are still useful to those who know how to use them. The brake lath..come on who has 1 in there garage..unless your a mechanic shop…so a bit elitist crap again thinking.
    Get interesting content that is relatable to most of us who work on cars. Dwell meter, timing light, micrometer etc…but again a brake lathe? LOL….even the dealerships got rid of them years ago!!

    I never had a bumper Jack. Britush cars had bottle hacks.

    I have and use all the other tools. I wish I had a brake lathe/shoe arching machine. Finding someone that still does that is getting very hard.

    But then. I still used a dwell meter also.

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