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expired Posted by phoinix | Staff • Last Tuesday
expired Posted by phoinix | Staff • Last Tuesday

4-Piece Amazon Basics Plumbing Adjustable Wrench Bundle

$22

$32

31% off
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Deal Details
Amazon has 4-Piece Amazon Basics Plumbing Adjustable Wrench Bundle (6, 8, 10, 12-Inch) for $22.04. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.
  • Note: Temporarily out of stock but orderable.
Features:
  • Set of four wide jaw adjustable plumbing wrenches with inch/metric measurement scale: 6 inch (150mm), 8 inch (200mm), 10 inch (250mm), 12 inch (300mm)
  • Ideal for auto repair, general assembly, maintenance, plumbing, and more
  • Drop-forged, heat-treated Cr-V steel construction with corrosion-resistant finish
  • Bi-color plastic soft-grip handles with slim head and tapered jaws for improved turning strength
  • Precision-machined slide jaw and worm gear for the perfect fit and easy adjustment
  • Dimensions: 12 x 3.3 x 0.7 inches (LxWxH)

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Please see original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.3 from over 3200 customer reviews.
  • About this store:

Original Post

Written by phoinix | Staff
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 4-Piece Amazon Basics Plumbing Adjustable Wrench Bundle (6, 8, 10, 12-Inch) for $22.04. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.
  • Note: Temporarily out of stock but orderable.
Features:
  • Set of four wide jaw adjustable plumbing wrenches with inch/metric measurement scale: 6 inch (150mm), 8 inch (200mm), 10 inch (250mm), 12 inch (300mm)
  • Ideal for auto repair, general assembly, maintenance, plumbing, and more
  • Drop-forged, heat-treated Cr-V steel construction with corrosion-resistant finish
  • Bi-color plastic soft-grip handles with slim head and tapered jaws for improved turning strength
  • Precision-machined slide jaw and worm gear for the perfect fit and easy adjustment
  • Dimensions: 12 x 3.3 x 0.7 inches (LxWxH)

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Please see original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.3 from over 3200 customer reviews.
  • About this store:

Original Post

Written by phoinix | Staff

Community Voting

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Top Comments

I tighten and remove my hoses every winter and do it by hand. Hand tight is the right way. If it leaks, you need a new rubber gasket at the connection.

16 Comments

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Pro
Last Tuesday
2,243 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
Last Tuesday
MasterRigger
Pro
Last Tuesday
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Papa bear, mama bear and baby bear wrenches
Last Tuesday
941 Posts
Joined Sep 2022
Last Tuesday
TealIdea227
Last Tuesday
941 Posts
I know these are a Channellock knockoff, and I'm sure that one day when I actually try to use one of them, I'm going to curse the fact that the jaws are thin and narrow, or wobbly, or some other issue associated with non-plumbing nuts being tighter than plumbing nuts. Also, I can see it won't work on a 3" flush valve.

But I'm going to pick them up anyway, because I have a very vague memory of a situation in the last year where my hodgepodge of adjustable wrenches were either too long or too small (it's been a long year.)
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PocketsThick
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Quote from TealIdea227 :
I know these are a Channellock knockoff, and I'm sure that one day when I actually try to use one of them, I'm going to curse the fact that the jaws are thin and narrow, or wobbly, or some other issue associated with non-plumbing nuts being tighter than plumbing nuts. Also, I can see it won't work on a 3" flush valve.But I'm going to pick them up anyway, because I have a very vague memory of a situation in the last year where my hodgepodge of adjustable wrenches were either too long or too small (it's been a long year.)
I'll give you a use case (I just encountered it) it's the connector on a hose. Every winter everyone should be taking their hoses off their outdoor spigots (well, if you encounter normal winter temperatures aka freezing temps).

A regular wrench is not wide enough to take off the connector. Then in spring you have to install the hose again. These wrenches will work really well for that use case.
Tightening a hose connector to a spigot by hand simply isn't good enough. You will have leaks on the hose. A wrench will prevent any leaks.
3
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w1nwin
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95 Posts
Quote from PocketsThick :
I'll give you a use case (I just encountered it) it's the connector on a hose. Every winter everyone should be taking their hoses off their outdoor spigots (well, if you encounter normal winter temperatures aka freezing temps). A regular wrench is not wide enough to take off the connector. Then in spring you have to install the hose again. These wrenches will work really well for that use case.Tightening a hose connector to a spigot by hand simply isn't good enough. You will have leaks on the hose. A wrench will prevent any leaks.
I tighten and remove my hoses every winter and do it by hand. Hand tight is the right way. If it leaks, you need a new rubber gasket at the connection.
2
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PocketsThick
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Quote from w1nwin :
I tighten and remove my hoses every winter and do it by hand. Hand tight is the right way. If it leaks, you need a new rubber gasket at the connection.
Just installed a couple of flexzilla hoses (best hose on the market) on two sipgots. Both times the water leaked out of the connector when tightening by hand. Hand tightening the flexzilla connector can only be tightened so far by hand. Not enough torque to screw it all the way by hand essentially.
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6d ago
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semjase
Pro
6d ago
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Quote from PocketsThick :
Just installed a couple of flexzilla hoses (best hose on the market) on two sipgots. Both times the water leaked out of the connector when tightening by hand. Hand tightening the flexzilla connector can only be tightened so far by hand. Not enough torque to screw it all the way by hand essentially.
These will solve your problems for life: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0...asin_title

(Probably enough to get buried with them for the afterlife too)

(I use these exact ones and they're wonderful)
Last edited by semjase June 11, 2025 at 06:04 PM.
6d ago
941 Posts
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TealIdea227
6d ago
941 Posts
Quote from semjase :
These will solve your problems for life: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0...asin_title(Probably enough to get buried with them for the afterlife too)(I use these exact ones and they're wonderful)
Thanks mang. I have red silicone ones without the little tabs, but only a few.

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Joebargain
4d ago
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Quote from semjase :
These will solve your problems for life: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0...asin_title

(Probably enough to get buried with them for the afterlife too)

(I use these exact ones and they're wonderful)

My problem is always finding these when I need them. With a 50 pack I can split them into 10x 5 packs and stash them everywhere haha. The silicone sounds like a very good idea as the rubber ones dry out pretty fast where I live in the desert
1
4d ago
16,561 Posts
Joined Nov 2003
4d ago
deshwasi
4d ago
16,561 Posts
Quote from TealIdea227 :
Thanks mang. I have red silicone ones without the little tabs, but only a few.
didnt even realize there are silicone ones. i saved them away in my cart. first need to get thru all the rubber ones I have.
2d ago
358 Posts
Joined Dec 2008
2d ago
glockmeister
2d ago
358 Posts
Temp out of stock but still allowing you to order for future shipping.
2d ago
1,974 Posts
Joined Oct 2004
2d ago
Steelgaze
2d ago
1,974 Posts
I have the big one of these from another brand but probably same factory in china. It's completely garbage for removing anything larger past the 30-35 mark. I originally got it because it has a smooth jaw and I didn't want to mark up the surface on a finished stainless.

Big mistake, the whole adjustable jaw part shifts and rocks like no tomorrow. I eventually got it off but really wanted to have paid something like 50 for a beefier adjustable wrench from craftman (still china) but at least it has better tolerances. So moral is dont be too cheap with your tools.
2d ago
1,003 Posts
Joined May 2007
2d ago
Rezer
2d ago
1,003 Posts
Quote from w1nwin :
I tighten and remove my hoses every winter and do it by hand. Hand tight is the right way. If it leaks, you need a new rubber gasket at the connection.

100% this. If you're a relatively able-bodied person and need to tighten garden hoses with a wrench you're just completely oblivious to the real issue: a worn $0.10 gasket (probably worn cause you've been tightening all your hoses with a wrench).
1
Yesterday
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Yesterday
Slimeyface
Yesterday
10,696 Posts
Quote from semjase :
These will solve your problems for life: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0...asin_title

(Probably enough to get buried with them for the afterlife too)

(I use these exact ones and they're wonderful)

Thanks for the link!
Is there something advantageous about these specifically? I see a bunch of listings for these types there and some even cheaper. Im eager to try these since im having leakage and wasnt aware of these.
Yesterday
1,258 Posts
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Yesterday
yourlefthand
Yesterday
1,258 Posts
Quote from Slimeyface :
Thanks for the link!
Is there something advantageous about these specifically? I see a bunch of listings for these types there and some even cheaper. Im eager to try these since im having leakage and wasnt aware of these.

You weren't aware of hose gaskets?

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Yesterday
10,696 Posts
Joined Aug 2008
Yesterday
Slimeyface
Yesterday
10,696 Posts
Quote from yourlefthand :
You weren't aware of hose gaskets?

Hose gaskets, yes….but replacing using these bulk silicone ones hadnt crossed my mind much. I don't think about hoses much hah

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