• out of stock

[VIC] Stanley 22 Piece L Handle Hex Key Set $4.98 @ Bunnings Warehouse Mornington

570

In store only at Mornington VIC. Estimated stock count at time of posting was 280+.

The Stanley 22 Piece L Handle Hex Key Set is now $4.98, while its usual price is $15. I have no idea about the quality; it is probably as soft as cheese, but for the casual user, it should be okay.

.Strong steel hex keys with black oxide coating
.Durable plastic molded holders with garage storage hand holes
.Labeled holders for easy organisation

The Long Arm SAE & Metric Hex Key Set includes 22 strong steel, rust-resistant hex keys in many popular SAE and metric sizes. This handy set comes with two labeled holders that make it easy to find exactly the size you need for your job. Hang the holders on the wall for convenient access and organisation.

Includes:
13 SAE: .05, 1/16, 5/64, 3/32, 7/64, 1/8, 9/64, 5/32, 3/16, 7/32, 1/4, 5/16 & 3/8”
9 Metric: 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 & 10mm

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Comments

  • +2

    Not in stock

    • There’s supposedly 288 at Mornington

      • +1

        I was about to say the same.
        https://nrby.in/bunnings/0395746

        • Looks like a lock on national supply.

        • +1

          Cool site, thank you

          Why is Mornington hoarding them? What are they planning??

          • +1

            @beltdrive: From prior experience working for Bunnings, these one-off promos often happened when the person ordering stock accidentally added an extra zero or two to the order quantity.

            The business preferred to sell off the stock at a discount rather than returning it to the supplier/DC 🤷🏻‍♂️

            • +6

              @omega595: ^Take note OzBargainers, if you work for Bunnings this is what we want you to do.

              • +1

                @dd22qq: This comment should be reposted to all Bunnings employees ASAP

      • +5

        Love me some Mornington Hex

        • You've redeemed an otherwise disappointing deal

        • Is that like a Franga Banger?

  • +6

    Still cheaper than cheese!

  • +4

    Sadly I'm old enough to remember when Stanley made good tools. Still a good pricw is you want a to make a set specific for your bike and throw away the rest

    • Made in America days?

    • +6

      I'm often reminded of this chart

      Stanley would just be competing with themselves. DeWalt, Stanley, Lenox, Irwin, Sidchrome are all on the shelf next to each other in hammerbarn. Gotta hit every price point

      • Stanley black and decker buy up good brands and trade on their reputation and treat them like rubbish. Pretty sad really. Thankfully there are still great family owned brands like roots and festool that havent succumbed.

        • Don't think I've ever heard a bad word about Festool.. apart from the price. I've never been able to justify buying any of their tools so have no hands on experience with them :(

        • Oops should have read RUPES not roots

      • which of their brands is best for socket sets?

        • +1

          Best, depends on what metric, quality ,price availability etc…

          For outright quality of all the SBD brands, it would be Proto, as they are an actual manufacturer. MAC Tools is their Tool Truck brand (think major competitor to Snap-On), but most of that will actually be made by Proto. Proto make tools for Snap-On and many others, they are the default for many brands to get a great socket wrench.

          Best value, would be Craftsman, you will still find these sockets in many pro auto mechanics in the US. They do the job well, and are cheap.

          I would love for Sidchrome to still be an Australian owned and manufactured brand, they were truly fantastic tools you could reply on.

  • This or a $50 Vessel set?

    • +1

      Id go the vessel everytime. Back when tools were expensive I bought a quality Japanese set of allen keys. They never let me down and fitted well. The cheap ones have a habit of rounding themselves or the head off and end up making a small job frustratingly large. I find nowadays you need a few sets. It must be a chinese fastener thing but sometimes a cheap slightly dogdy allen key can work better than the right sized quality item.

      • It must be a chinese fastener thing but sometimes a cheap slightly dogdy allen key can work better than the right sized quality item.

        That's very interesting. I wonder if the softer materials used in a cheap tool helps when the fastener isn't made with precision?

        Thanks for the advice. Decided the Vessel set looks even better than the German ones, so will splurge.

  • +4

    Life is too short to use rubbish Hex sets. Almost guaranteed to round out and take the bolt with them.

    Keep an eye out for a Wera or a Wiha set going cheap on Amazon and you’ll never look back. Last 9 piece metric Wiha set I got was $27.75, bargain.

  • +2

    Made in USA Bondhus hex keys are widely regarded in industry.

    • I don't use mine super often but absolutely, picked up a metric and imperial set of these from a deal here and since got rid of pretty much all my other hex keys, if something comes with one to use I don't even bother and just pull out the Bondhus they're really good.

      I'm always keeping half an eye open for a deal on their torx key set

  • Price beat with Supercheap Auto and get it at your local store (if they're in stock)

    • I don't see it on their website.

  • wont post to Rockhampton

  • -1

    In WA, item missing in action.

  • That’s more hex than I can handle

  • Why are people still using these. Hexes should have handles. Do you use a phillips/blade bit without a handle? No!

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