rtz
Well-known member
Have you ever had or seen one in which the movable jaw didn't wobble side to side?
Where did you get your VBW stuff? All the pliers in this picture are not able to be shipped to USA from German tool retailers from what I can see.
The older US made Kleins were very smooth with very minimal wobble/movement, they are now made in Spain like most all others, Irega OEM (still a good wrench).
I have some old Williams adjustables that are absolutely great. Smooth, tight, beefy jaws where it counts, and they just look good.Williams superjustable.
Yes. High quality adjustable wrenches like Klein and Proto.
Williams superjustable.
Wilde in Kansas still makes a nice one I believe.
https://www.wildetool.com/product/12-adjustable-wrench/
It’s been a while, but Amazon I think. Stahlwille is the same and available at KC Tool.
That's disappointing to find out that Klein no longer produces their own adjustable wrench; they made some of the best.
I could be wrong, but don’t think Klein ever had “in house” production of their adjustable wrenches. I’m pretty sure Klein adjustables were rebrands made by other manufacturers. I think Western Forge was the producer for awhile. For a time Klein adjustables were coming out of a Japan and were marked as such. The quality on those was prettty decent. I’ve got one with a blue transparent handle cover.
Have you ever had or seen one in which the movable jaw didn't wobble side to side?
Snap-on/Bahco are great.
Snap-on/Bahco are great.
I'm surprised that people rate ANY traditional adjustable wrenches even decent for automotive work. The design is the problem, not the brand. A SnapOn is not much better than $5 ones in terms of the lateral wobble, which may result in rounded fasteners. They are only good for home maintenance.I’m really quiet surprised people rate the current Snap-on/SNA adjustable wrenches so highly, I find the Spanish made wrenches to have very poor tolerances and plating compared to older wrenches. I have both bahco and Snap-on wrenches from the 50s-80s and find them to be of much higher quality. In terms of recently made adjustables I find Irega, Klein-USA and TOP-Kogyo of Japan to be superlative to any others.

Surprisingly, after this many years, all those tool makers still can't come up with a design that eliminate the wobble.
Knipex's plier wrench is interesting, but still not a fixed jaw wrench because it still needs the pressure from the handle to keep the jaws in place.
Maybe smarter people should work on tool design.
...Knipex's plier wrench is interesting, but still not a fixed jaw wrench because it still needs the pressure from the handle to keep the jaws in place...
For situations where a normal adjustable wrench works, yes, the Knipex works well, and seems more convenient/flexible.You can use it while pushing on just one handle (it does not actually require squeezing the two handles together), so how is it not up to a task?
In terms of not allowing slacks between the jaws, I don't know if it's possible to get tighter than the vise-gripped jaw wrench.I have the Stanley version of that tool (there's a craftsman version too). It is in NO way equivalent to (and certainly not superior to) a Knipex pliers wrench.
...But when dealing with rusted fasteners, a lot of torque maybe needed. You need to squeeze Knipex hard while wrench it hard. At one point, your hands may not be able to hold it tight.
In terms of not allowing slacks between the jaws, I don't know if it's possible to get tighter than the vise-gripped jaw wrench...
Buy a pair of Milwaukee's, and you will change your tune. I often find myself having to loosen it because I can't get it off the nut easily. Instead of only 3 ridges on the adjustment screw, they have 5. Only adjustable wrench I will use now, other than using my old ones to use as hammers & pry bars (or practicing dodgeball).
^^
Got it!
Originally, I thought a squeezing force is needed to keep the Knipex jaws on the fastener when either tightening or loosening. Now, I realized that when tightening (for a bolt facing us), use the Knipex this way:
When loosening, flip the Knipex around:
Have to get my hands on one of those. Thanks.
I have a set of these, amazing wrenches so smooth and very tight, really comfortable to grip aswell, plus the quality is very sturdyCheck out Bahco. The same adjustable wrenches Snap On rebrands (Bahco makes for Snap On). I have a few of them, great prices on Amazon.
Being I wasnt born until 89 I have limited experience with tools from the 50s-80sI’m really quiet surprised people rate the current Snap-on/SNA adjustable wrenches so highly, I find the Spanish made wrenches to have very poor tolerances and plating compared to older wrenches. I have both bahco and Snap-on wrenches from the 50s-80s and find them to be of much higher quality. In terms of recently made adjustables I find Irega, Klein-USA and TOP-Kogyo of Japan to be superlative to any others.
They Snap-On is much better than any of the other ones I have used, but also admittedly my first "high end" unit.I'm surprised that people rate ANY traditional adjustable wrenches even decent for automotive work. The design is the problem, not the brand. A SnapOn is not much better than $5 ones in terms of the lateral wobble, which may result in rounded fasteners. They are only good for home maintenance.
This adjustable wrench (found in Homdepot) seems to be a much smarter design, using vise-grip like mechanism to eliminate wobble. IMO, better than Knipex plier wrench that costs $50+, which is a glorified straight jaw plier.
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Check out Bahco. The same adjustable wrenches Snap On rebrands (Bahco makes for Snap On). I have a few of them, great prices on Amazon.