More reliable than marketing **** by the manufacturers and outspoken yet anonymous forum dwellersPF product choices, test results and comments are questionable opinion at best .
better than manufacturer marketing for sure but falls short of real world use experience .More reliable than marketing **** by the manufacturers and outspoken yet anonymous forum dwellers
Peterson done well for me in 30 years professional use. and I still able buy decent condition used, I would never buy Irwin new. Milwaukee and bremen do well at their price points and ease of availability for all .Any Vise-Grip test without a genuine Petersen as a control is incomplete.
Eyewitness testimony is the least reliable form of evidence in a court of law. Human memory is objectively garbage. I would submit that recorded and compiled empirical tests are, in fact, better and more useful data than anecdotal real world experience.better than manufacturer marketing for sure but falls short of real world use experience .
I'll take my 30 years personal use experience over majority youtuber tests, PF is far from viable testing and of poor product brand grouped choices .Eyewitness testimony is the least reliable form of evidence in a court of law. Human memory is objectively garbage. I would submit that recorded and compiled empirical tests are, in fact, better and more useful data than anecdotal real world experience.
PF's test videos are not made for people who already own tools and are happy with them.I'll take my 30 years personal use experience over majority youtuber tests, PF is far from viable testing and of poor product brand grouped choices .
I have Malcos, Pittsburgh HF and used Irwins at work.
The Malcos are awesome, and grip like no other. My eagle grips saved us doing some suspension work the other day.
The Irwins I used at work were 2016 vintage. They were not good. The teeth flattened easily and they just never gripped that well. I'd rank them as "serviceable".
The HF Pittsburgh are garbage. They don't grip anything, and the link bar in the middle folds up whenever you put any clamping force on them.
I disagree.As far as old Peterson vice grips they haven't been made in 20+ years. Not even worth bringing up other than nostalgia.
Please link your youtube channel where you post your testing based on superior selection and methodology.I'll take my 30 years personal use experience over majority youtuber tests, PF is far from viable testing and of poor product brand grouped choices .
it's called life experience and that started couple decades before youtube.Please link your youtube channel where you post your testing based on superior selection and methodology.
I still use them daily, some are 30 to 40 years old, NOS still around and plenty like new can be picked up used in good order at swaps and yard sales for fraction cost of irwin or milwaukee. teeth held out pretty good on the old ones, Irwin china jaw teeth could be badly ruined in 1 or 2 jobs.Interesting test, everyone is going to throw out why not this or that but it's a YouTube video that is primarily designed to entertain. If you think he missed something buy and build a test setup and show us the results.
As far as old Peterson vice grips they haven't been made in 20+ years. Not even worth bringing up other than nostalgia.
I was surprised how well the Irwin did. Most people here say the newer one's ****, but they clearly don't.
At my grandfathers farm, the one tool everyone carried was a ViseGrip - always one with a wire cutter. We’d use 1/8” mild steel galvanized wire for a lot of things. Whether you were wiring some broken piece on an implement in place to limp it back to the shop, temporarily mending a barbed wire fence, or twisting a draw-wire to pull two pieces together, the wire cutters got a lot of use.Gotta ask, isn't the "cutter" for welding wire and similar, not a ******** nail?
Exactly. There are almost certainly people on this forum who own Buicks that were made in China. Our iPhones are made in China. Everyone’s automotive scan tool is made in China.A Chinese product could be superior to a vintage USA one, but there is a vocal minority here that essentially says, "If it's made in China, it's automatically junk".
The approach you suggested doesn't work. When regular folks use locking pliers, how would they make sure to apply max pressure on the teeth? By turning the adjusting screws. That's the only way to do it. If the pressure on the jaws cannot be achieved by turning the adjustment screw, what are you going to do? It's also always a danger to strip the hex hole, so small torque on the hex hole with max biting force, combined, is the best design.It’s a credible attempt to put some engineering finesse into a comparison. It obviously is flawed in trying to compare using the same adjuster screw torque, which isn’t reflective of actual use. Easy to see why it was done that way, but either figuring a way to put equal pressure on the jaws, or a more real-world case would be adjusting until equal force is needed on the handles to lock the pliers closed.
When I want a tight grip, I gradually adjust the screw until it is as tight as I can squeeze the handles and get it to snap shut. To be fair, adjusting the screw until the same closing force on the handle would be required.The approach you suggested doesn't work. When regular folks use locking pliers, how would they make sure to apply max pressure on the teeth?
it's called life experience and that started couple decades before youtube.
The point is don't take half arsed testing on youtube channels over a bit of gumption and personal experience .

More reliable than marketing **** by the manufacturers and outspoken yet anonymous forum dwellers
Political issues aside:PF's tests are generally pretty good to very good; including this one. Yes, his testing equipment doesn't look ****, but if you can do better, then instead of complaining that he *****, go ahead and do better. But people won't, that takes work, so they just complain, which is easy.
Without having a real testing lab, IMO he does a very good job ensuring an apples-to-apples comparison between the brands. His grinding wheel, circular saw blade, reciprocating saw blade.... tests are good. What more could he do to ensure the comparisons are equal without a million-dollar testing lab??? If you don't like the brands he picks, oh well, suggest that in the comments. He clearly can't test everything, so complaining about what brands he selects to test is irrelevant to the results that he gets for what's tested.
I was surprised how well the Irwin did. Most people here say the newer one's ****, but they clearly don't. And the Chinese Irwins are miles ahead of the Taiwan made Tekton; I was surprised how poorly Tekton did- they clearly dropped the ball on the tooth design. The Irwins just "****" to some here, because they're made in China. A Chinese product could be superior to a vintage USA one, but there is a vocal minority here that essentially says, "If it's made in China, it's automatically junk". I understand not wanting to buy Chinese for political reasons, so ok on that, but that doesn't mean it's all junk. Somehow when someone asks about a Chinese vise, "no, it's junk cast iron; it has to be vintage USA". But trusting your life to Chinese jack stands is somehow different than a vise- Chinese jack stands are perfectly ok, but not their vises, vise grips, etc. Got it.
The issue with this design might have been that the release lever was too exposed.
Stanley improving the quality actually makes sense.The original Newell-Rubbermaid Irwins were made of some type of metallic butter.
Real world use proved this. It wasnt just people here.
I havent used any since the initial COO change. They were terrible.
I see a lot of used tools and the teeth on the early Irwins are often trashed.
Its very highly possible that NBI made improvements to reduce failure.
Its also highly possible that when SBD acquired them in 2017, they worked to improve quality/metallurgy since they had a bad reputation, possibly even changing manufacturer. Who knows.
While that may be true, I have been using the tog-l-lok for decades and have never had an issue with them popping open. I do like the Facom you mentioned, I will have to check them out.The issue with this design might have been that the release lever was too exposed.
I can easily see instances where someone spent a bunch on time bending something together to weld or rivet, and some of the locking pliers coming loose because the unlocking lever got bumped.
The same goes to a stubborn bolt. You lock the pliers on, trying to get a stubborn bolt off, the bolt twists in the hole, the lever hits an obstruction, and the locking pliers fall off.
That said, the current nice but really expensive Facom locking pliers have a lever in a similar place, as did the previous Facom design. The design isn’t the same, but is somewhat similar in placement.
The last couple years of the US production weren't that great either so we are talking about roughly 20 year old pliers. I have spent a lot of time in pawn shops and swap meets across the Rockies over the last 15 years and have bought all the Peterson vice grips in decent condition I have found which is like 10 pairs (passed on probably 100 in worn out condition). I gave up a couple years ago and just started buying Strong hand and Stanley. The strong hand are just as good a clamp and the Stanleys haven't let me down. Stanley is at Walmart and SH is at my LWS. No more hoping I'll find a pair of pliers in okay condition.I disagree.
VG was US made until 14 years ago.
There are more of them floating around out there than any other brand on the used market.
Malcos have only been available now for 10 months or so and are expensive.
More than that, they are very limited. 7's and 10's straight and curved, 11's c-clamp. Thats it.
(They are working on others like welding pliers and seamers but are N/A now.)
For the less common grips not available from anyone else, used Petersens are currently still king.
And for someone on a budget, picking up a pair used at a pawn shop or swap meet for $5 is still a very good option, and even in used form are likely better quality than alot of the new ones.