Allen wrenches that I usedxas a Cnc Setup/machinist, was Bondhus (made in USA). But hardened, and well made with the EZ tip on long end, that locates to allen bolt, really easy, (don’t have to be exactly aligned to allen geometry, used breaker bars, not advised obviously for printer, but very few issues in 20+ yrs
Myself I use Bondhus allen wrenches, both L Key style and driver style. The L style are the one ones to start with and offer the highest torque but if fiddling with small screws the driver (like a screw driver) are my preferred. They're aren't expensive, with wrenches you get what you pay, so don't go cheap unless you want rounded or stripped fasteners. Soldering, myself I use a Hakko FX888D, last station a hobbyist will buy unless they get super serious with soldering. Great advice on your suggested tools, I have them all in my arsenal and use them often enough with each mod or upgrade. Thanks for your video!
When your allen keys round out you can ground the ends flat again on a bench grinder.
Allen wrenches that I usedxas a Cnc Setup/machinist, was Bondhus (made in USA). But hardened, and well made with the EZ tip on long end, that locates to allen bolt, really easy, (don’t have to be exactly aligned to allen geometry, used breaker bars, not advised obviously for printer, but very few issues in 20+ yrs
Myself I use Bondhus allen wrenches, both L Key style and driver style. The L style are the one ones to start with and offer the highest torque but if fiddling with small screws the driver (like a screw driver) are my preferred. They're aren't expensive, with wrenches you get what you pay, so don't go cheap unless you want rounded or stripped fasteners.
Soldering, myself I use a Hakko FX888D, last station a hobbyist will buy unless they get super serious with soldering.
Great advice on your suggested tools, I have them all in my arsenal and use them often enough with each mod or upgrade.
Thanks for your video!