anndel
Well-known member
I have their 10" and 7" curved jaws with wire cutters and been waiting for a long nose version. I guess if they are shutting down and shuddering the plant next month I'll pick up some Tektons.
I've relieved full refunds from my old dealer for a product they no longer carried.Hopefully snap-on keeps a stash around or produces a similar product. Otherwise my math of buying their rebrand for warranty purposes will fall apart.
They're awesome pliers regardless. They just work.
Hopefully snap-on keeps a stash around or produces a similar product. Otherwise my math of buying their rebrand for warranty purposes will fall apart.
They're awesome pliers regardless. They just work.
Gripon sell for a lot more than 20 bucks a piece no issues, to me biggest issue was not expanding range or being innovative, marketing/social media was non excitant and if they can't sell enough why haven't they made effort get them to europe market & revise pricing a bit .Doomed from the start. Vice grips are by nature dirty tools used for dirty purposes. Welding, working on old rusty **** etc. They built, sold and priced them as museum pieces of art. I predicted this failure (I believe Fedwrench did as well) at their introduction. A blind man could have seen this coming. $20 yes, $50 NO.
What store is that in Annadale? ThanksI doubt if there will be a press release. I was told all of the inventory of finished tools will b shipped to Annandale and sold thru there at a deep discounted price.
Most places were selling the Eagle Grip pliers for more than $50.Oh well, that was fast. But how many pairs of $50 pliers did they think they were going to sell when very good quality imports are $10? They definitely didn't do their homework on this business venture.
If there is a sale on these, I'll pick a few up. But not at the current prices.
The only company that could make it work would be Snap On, but they don't seem to be buying enough to keep them going.
Harry Epsteins has them, and is a local store to somebody. Just order enough to make the shipping worth it.i think the biggest failure was not being available. i have never seen a pair available anywere. my idea was to support a local business that sold them. not in ace, hardware hank, menards, home depot, lowes, acme.........nothing.
i am especially disappointed with acme, they carry malco tools in house.
could irwin be saying if you carry the eagle grips you don't get out stuff?
I have their 10" and 7" curved jaws with wire cutters and been waiting for a long nose version. I guess if they are shutting down and shuddering the plant next month I'll pick up some Tektons.
I was going to wait a bit and eventually buy some when they hopefully got a bit cheaper. Seems that won't happen except it sounds like they might still make a cheaper version. I am used to vise-grips so any of the others with the release the other way is unusual for me.
I was going to wait a bit and eventually buy some when they hopefully got a bit cheaper. Seems that won't happen except it sounds like they might still make a cheaper version. I am used to vise-grips so any of the others with the release the other way is unusual for me.
could irwin be saying if you carry the eagle grips you don't get out stuff?
We carry both brands and were never told anything like that. Truth be told, SBD isn't smart enough to try games like that. They're too busy losing money at Home Depot to care about any other distributor on the planet. The issue with the Eagle Grips was that they were just too expensive. Many people (on this forum especially) proudly pay a premium for US made heirloom quality products but the general consumer is brutally objective about value and the price point was maybe $15-20 too high in my opinion.
Mr. B nailed. Piss poor business plan. Malco has no marketing group. They rely on the Malco name and gear toward the professional. That is fine for their HVAC type tools. Nobody knows the EagleGrip name. If you want to sell professional tools then keep the Malco name on those. The market cap I think would be in the $25 range for the do it yourself user. Build a less expensive version for that group. Just looking at the current tool I can see a lot of changes they could make and still have the best/strongest pliers in the world; plating, pinned jaw, etc. Talking to a couple employees there they said everything was ran thru Annandale, MN by their engineers. They do not manufacture anything there. They assemble parts somebody else made. They do not know how manufacturing works. Annandale didn't want to listen to the engineers, tool/die folks in Dewitt who I was told between the supervisors, tool/die have close to 200 years of experience building these tools. Employees said at times they were throwing more tools away than they were keeping. I don't know. Just too bad. For all of you that think these other brands (insert name here) are quality tools havent busted your knuckles when you rip the teeth off them. There is nothing that even comes close to the superior quality of an EagleGrip. Yes, I am bias because I have many friends who work at EagleGrip and worked for Petersen when they were building ViseGrips. I happily paid $50/tool for the 2 I have. However, I do understand they are not for everyone. I hope somebody can buy EagleGrip who knows what they are doing and can streamline the company to make it a go. Thank you to everyone for your opinions and comments. I am trying to bring attention to a fabulous American made product.
Sounds like the same old, same old. Malco got the info they needed out of the reboot. Listening to the dusty old manufacturing/ machinist dudes probably gets tiring when all they got is the way they did it 40 years ago and refuse to listen or adapt to new ideas. Malco can probably contract out the different parts now and assembly themselves and still make money at half the cost.
Sounds like the same old, same old. Malco got the info they needed out of the reboot. Listening to the dusty old manufacturing/ machinist dudes probably gets tiring when all they got is the way they did it 40 years ago and refuse to listen or adapt to new ideas. Malco can probably contract out the different parts now and assembly themselves and still make money at half the cost.
If you can, try the Tektons out before buying them. I bought their locking plier set and was quite disappointed. They have so much side to side flex in them that they seem to be worthless for most tasks. I plan on setting them out in my next yard sale. I was a Tekton fan before this. I haven't bought anything from them since.I have their 10" and 7" curved jaws with wire cutters and been waiting for a long nose version. I guess if they are shutting down and shuddering the plant next month I'll pick up some Tektons.
Stanley Black & Decker by revenue is maybe 10%-12% of the global tool market.We carry both brands and were never told anything like that. Truth be told, SBD isn't smart enough to try games like that. They're too busy losing money at Home Depot to care about any other distributor on the planet. The issue with the Eagle Grips was that they were just too expensive. Many people (on this forum especially) proudly pay a premium for US made heirloom quality products but the general consumer is brutally objective about value and the price point was maybe $15-20 too high in my opinion.
No one is sure why Stanley does anything it does. Originally, the brand "Husky" was an SBD brand, then it became a HD exclusive, then SBD gave it lock stock to HD, now it looks to be mostly made by Apex. I was just speaking to locking pliers where I suspect that Irwin/Vice-Grip is the category leader. They never reached out to say "If you carry Malco, you can't carry VG" That kind of focus on distribution isn't in their repertoire. They barely answer the phone for Lowes, let alone any other distributors.I’m not sure why Stanley sold Bosch their power tool division.
I've heard several theories about SBD being mad abut Malco and saying this is why they are no longer supplying Snap-On with Irwin taps and dies. But I've seen absolutely zero evidence to support that, and it's clear that Irwin is having a hard time getting tap and die sets out even under their own brand.We carry both brands and were never told anything like that. Truth be told, SBD isn't smart enough to try games like that. They're too busy losing money at Home Depot to care about any other distributor on the planet. The issue with the Eagle Grips was that they were just too expensive. Many people (on this forum especially) proudly pay a premium for US made heirloom quality products but the general consumer is brutally objective about value and the price point was maybe $15-20 too high in my opinion.
I bought 1, probably will buy a few more now they're closing down. Gotta turn into a hoarder I guessThey looked very nice. Sad.
How many GJ guys actually ran out and ordered some? How many did you buy?
I didn’t buy any.
My stock of existing Petersens/ Irwin’s will last me well after death.
I own a couple pairs of the Facom locking pliers, never seen another pair anywhere in real lifr, not in use, at a boot sale, ruined in the scrap pile, seen a ton of cheap imports and loads of Vice grips, mole grips etc. They are also too expensive for the vast majority of locking plier users.Most places were selling the Eagle Grip pliers for more than $50.
The main issue was that German made locking pliers could be purchased for less than $30 per pair, and sometimes $20 per pair.
Asian Import pliers made to a high quality and out of decent steel can be purchased for $15 or less, with no name brands going for under $10.
Vise-Grip branded locking pliers can also be had for less than $15 for modt styles, and have done very well recently in quality tests.
The other main issues were;
Malco kept the Peterson release lever design, which doesn’t work well one handed, and which can wack your fingertips badly if you open the handles wrong, which makes the release hated by a lot of people.
Also;
Malco only made several types of the locking pliers.
Curved and straight jaw versions of the standard locking plier design, in 10” and 7” versions, and two styles of locking C-clamp.
For what the pliers cost, they would really need to have made a bunch of the weirder jaw styles that usually sell for a premium.
Facom has the weird locking pliers that can be opened very wide, and those are made in France, and have a similar price give or take.
German tool manufacturers have multiple styles with parallel or pivoting jaws.
There was no chain version for gripping large pipe.
Etc.
4 total, 2 from the snappy truck, 2 from Epsteins. Gave 1 set away for GJSS last yearHow many GJ guys actually ran out and ordered some? How many did you buy?
