Jeeper
Well-known member
Bought these maybe a month ago from Lowes. Was pulling a cotter pin from an axle nut and look what happened. Hopefully Lowes will warranty them.
Bought these maybe a month ago from Lowes. Was pulling a cotter pin from an axle nut and look what happened. Hopefully Lowes will warranty them.
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While techinally they were not being used in the proper manner, that's pretty pathetic. Any decent pair of long nose pliers should be able to handle that type of use for quite some time before that kind of breakage occurs. Hopefully you just got a bad set, they will be warrentied and the next set will hold up better.
Thats a hard call to make if you wern't there. I'm not a huge fan of Knipex they were being used for the wrong job. That would be like me saying my Snap-On screwdriver wasn't any good because it snapped the pist time I pryed open a brake caliper (I've done it). Wrong tool for the job period. I use Channellock side cutters and grab the big end and pull out cotter keys by getting the end of the cutter on the nut and pulling up on the back end. Not the correct tool for the job but works better than the tools made for the job. If they get dull I won't blame the tool
True but good tools break, cheap tools bend
Bought these maybe a month ago from Lowes. Was pulling a cotter pin from an axle nut and look what happened. Hopefully Lowes will warranty them.
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See my broken pair at the end of this thread: Errrmmm, exactly what job is needle nosed pliers intended for if not jobs such as this?
Yes, there probably is a German tool to straighten the left side, and a second for the right side of the pin. And another pair of tools if the long end is on the wrong side. And a sleeve to align it perfectly with the hole so a screw type puller can extract it.
But that doesn't mean a needle nose pliers is the wrong tool for the job, using it in that way is abusing it.

That I can recall.Be prepared for people to blame you for their breaking. People are very defensive about Knipex for some reason.See my broken pair at the end of this thread:
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=42128
You get the feeling from this board, that ANY time you use a Knipex and it breaks, that it's post-facto "the wrong tool for the job." If you were pulling marshmallows out of a bag and it broke, somebody would post that your Knipex were the wrong tool for it. Pliers are multi-use tools. I would think a pair of needlenose pliers should be able to pull a piece of wire from a hole, even if there is a dedicated tool for it.
That said, Lowes will replace it, and Knipex would also likely replace it for you, as they did mine.

I don't defend Knipex because I don't really care for most of their stuff but in this case it was absolutly the wrong tool for the job. Those are delicate and precise pliers. A lot would depend on the size of the cotter pin. As with everybody else here I was assuming.
..... delicate pliers? 

The pliers are very hard steel, they are very thin and small. The fact they they are hardend so they grip so much better (for their intended job) they are way overloaded as they are not made for such a side load. They are excellant for doing the job they were made to do. Putting a side load is like putting a side load on a quality srewdriver. They just snap. Just like a screwdriver isn't a pry bar neither is a set of small needle nose a cotter pin puller. There is a reason they make cotter pin pullers. That is to keep from screwing up other tools and to make the job easier, It this had been a set of Habor Freight pliers people would be lined up to blame China. Wrong tool for the job period. He may as well been using those Knipex as a prybar..... delicate pliers?
you'll have to defend that for me. They are made of steel, no? What exactly constitutes a "delicate" set of pliers vs. a "general use" set? Do they purposely make this set so "precisely" that they are weak by nature and should only be used on soft, delicate jobs that require 0.00001" tolerances on the grip knurls?
I don't know exactly HOW the failure happened in this case, I just know that it SHOULDN'T have happened. I've been downright abusive with my 5 or 6 sets of C-Man needlenose pliers and none have ever bent, broken, broken then bent, or bent then broken.
I would expect more from a $30 pair of needlenose pliers.![]()
So my friend was the trying to pull the cotterpin...not sure if he pryed or pulled or what. The castle nut was pinching the pin so that is why it woudn't come out. There may be other tools for that job, but i have pulled out many of cotterpins with my old craftsman needlenose and haven't had any problems.
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I would almost bet money that he used one side of the needle nose tip and put it in the cotter pin hole and then tried to lever it out across the edge of the nut.
I really doubt that gripping the pin tightly caused this type of failure.
I would almost bet money that he used one side of the needle nose tip and put it in the cotter pin hole and then tried to lever it out across the edge of the nut.
I really doubt that gripping the pin tightly caused this type of failure.
The only Knipex tool I'm actually interested in purchasing is the Pliers Wrench.
So nobody else uses these SK cotter pin removal pliers?
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The pliers are very hard steel, they are very thin and small. The fact they they are hardend so they grip so much better (for their intended job) they are way overloaded as they are not made for such a side load. They are excellant for doing the job they were made to do. Putting a side load is like putting a side load on a quality srewdriver. They just snap. Just like a screwdriver isn't a pry bar neither is a set of small needle nose a cotter pin puller. There is a reason they make cotter pin pullers. That is to keep from screwing up other tools and to make the job easier, It this had been a set of Habor Freight pliers people would be lined up to blame China. Wrong tool for the job period. He may as well been using those Knipex as a prybar