Oh Kickstarter, you’re at it again. Bike tools are no stranger to the pages of Kickstarter, with items like the Fix It Sticks and the The Nutter getting their start on the popular crowd funding site. Peter Wen is taking his turn now with his evolutionary design for an universal allen key. The TeleHex puts a twist on the standard pack of folding allen keys by packing a 3mm, 4mm, 5mm, and 6mm allen head into a single sliding unit. The TeleHex automatically adjusts to the size you need with a slight twist and a bit of pressure. As always, the full details can be found on the TeleHex Kickstarter page.
Anyone who uses several different size hex / allen keys and nuts numerous times every hour of every work day would ABSOLUTELY love a strong and reliable universal / adjustable hex / allen key. I assemble machines all day and spend an ABSURD amount of time swapping out different size allen keys.
I like it.
Sure, it doesn’t come with a chain tool, or screwdrivers, but it’s neat simple and elegant.
What would make it a “killer” would be to add a screwdriver, chain tool, and have one of the sides work as a tire lever, then it immediately would address all my “daily” and “paranoid-never-has-happened-on/off-road-brakedowns”.
Probably also good to make a separate Road and MTB version, considering the need of T25 mentioned earlier.
All-in-all: I like it a lot, there’s room for making it “better” (a good thing), it’s unique, it’s simple and neat and elegant… And I probably just convinced myself to fund the thing on Kickstarter. 🙂
Definitely cool, but my old park i-beam is smaller (based on appearance) and probably about the same weight, and has more functionality at $10 or so. I don’t use a mini tool enough to where long term durability is a real issue (if you do, you’re doing it wrong!). Chris nailed it – I can’t see why unless you’re looking for the conversation starter.
I agree with @JB you could bang out a bike build with one tool pretty quickly up until things needed to be torqued. Three way tools always are too wide and I find clip the frame when working quickly. For those that travel with their bikes this is a great option. Especially triathletes that very rarely know anything more than riding their bikes in a straight line let alone unboxing one and assembling it. Its basically plug and play in a sense.