Yes.So it is possible to have a 3 position plier without staggering the pivot point.
I'm showing stock in Louisville... about 140 miles away from me.Can anyone find the #70592 (ICON 7 in. Wire Stripper, Cutter, and Crimper) in stock in stores anymore?
These haven't been available to purchase in months, but they remain on the website, but they don't allow you to order them.
I wanted another pair.

Undercutting Harbor Freight here for $14
WORKPRO 8'' Long Nose Slip Joint Pliers, CR-V Needle Nose Pliers with Comfortable Grip Handles, 3-Zone Serrated Jaw from Premium Steel for Clamping, Tightening and Loosening - Amazon.com
WORKPRO 8'' Long Nose Slip Joint Pliers, CR-V Needle Nose Pliers with Comfortable Grip Handles, 3-Zone Serrated Jaw from Premium Steel for Clamping, Tightening and Loosening - Amazon.comwww.amazon.com
Yep, it's a double joint.Besides the pretty obvious lack of quality shown in the video clip, is it my eyes of do the Chinesium pliers also lack the distinctive triple slip joint?
Of course.So it is possible to have a 3 position plier without staggering the pivot point.
I have occasionally used/abused the IPS SF-200 for close to 5 years at work and they have surpassed expectations. The teeth and cutter are more durable than I initially gave them credit for. The hidden spring has proved beneficial for a couple repetitive jobs too.

correct.Kraeuter was doing it decades ago.
I think I mentioned it earlier in this thread, but if HF was only planning on making one size, they should have made these 8".(FTR: I bought two pairs of the 9-inch ICON model. My buddy loves his. Mine are still in the package, as I've never really felt a need for them since buying them. If they came out with a 7-incher, I'd most likely actually be using them.)
I'd give them a try if I didn't already have the 3 different sizes of the Snap-On long nose slip joints.Just for the hell of it I ordered a pair of those Workpro a couple months ago and they are pretty damn decent for such a low price. I've used them six or eight times, I probably should beat on them a little bit just to see how they hold up.
OneI found the teeth/serrations on the workpro to wear down super fast. I used them to turn out a screw, something that a vamplier or twin grip would have been the better tool for, but the workpro slip needles were in my hand at the time. That one screw really screwed them up
I did too. Maybe they'll work better for pulling swarf out of the lathe than the pair I'm using now.Ordered workpro ... why not for $14?!






My Icon pair is holding up fine. Can't say "hard use" but...I wonder how some of these will hold up over time. Without a good heat treating/hardening process the small serrations can flatten out over time and loose their grip.
Yes it was the outer end that got chewed up, maybe 6-8mm from the tip.Onewouldmight assume that the teeth on the business end of the tool would have been hardened.
Were the teeth on the jaws at the outer end deformed?
Was this a hardened screw/bolt you were trying to remove?
Drywall screws are surprisingly hard. And I suppose it's no surprise that the teeth on a "value priced" pair of pliers aren't as hard as Knipex or Snappy.Yes it was the outer end that got chewed up, maybe 6-8mm from the tip.
I think it might have been a drywall screw. It was holding a j-box to a stud, and the head was bent dramatically preventing me from getting a screwdriver on it, so I had to turn it from the side.
To be fair to HF, I’ve killed several Vessel and Knipex screwdrivers and pliers in dry wall screws that some idiot used on pallets. Those suckers are the bane of my existence.Drywall screws are surprisingly hard. And I suppose it's no surprise that the teeth on a "value priced" pair of pliers aren't as hard as Knipex or Snappy.