To those that have shall be given. Oh woe! The world is not a fair place.
Ah, Andre...I paid in advance for the seeming excess of owning three when I had to walk,
carrying the bike in the rain for
15 miles to a pay phone, then wait another three hours for a ride when I couldn't get the fool tire off to fix the puncture....
Which is why I promptly bought three when I got home and have carried (and used!) them religiously Ever After when need arose.
Ironically, now tires and rims are made to much better tolerances that don't aggregate against me, I usually use just my fingers to mount and remove tires.
For what it is worth, even the Kool-Stop Tire Jack (
http://www.amazon.com/Kool-Stop-Tire-Bead-Jack/dp/B001AYML7K ) -- a dedicated shop tool -- is not a match for the mighty yet petite VAR RP42500.
VAR's
shop tools have often been a bit crude and seemingly unnecessarily heavy, but they'll still be around after the Apocalypse. To this day, I rue selling my cast-iron VAR wheelbuilding stand. My Minoura still serves me faithfully for well over 30 years now, but it lacks some of the VAR's soul.
All the best,
Dan. (...who still things VAR roolz)