Malco has stopped production of the EagleGrip locking pliers. They do not have the name recognition to charge the premium price they are trying to sell them at. No retailers are willing to put them on their shelves next to $15 ViseGrips which look extremely similar. Consumers do not care how much stronger EagleGrips are and not enough people are willing to pay 3-4x the money for a product made in the USA. Malco did absolutely no market research when they started the EagleGrip line. There is talk of them making a '2nd generation' pliers that will be virtually identical to the conventional ViseGrip. Something they can sell for $25-30. It took them 4 years to get their first version of pliers out so I wouldn't look for these to come out any time soon, if ever. I appreciate them trying to bring some manufacturing back to the USA but unfortunately I think it is gonna be another failed attempt.
UPDATE!!! Malco is closing the doors to the EagleGrip factory effective Dec. 31, 2022. They are actively looking for a buyer. They are going to finish an order for another company and that is it.

When I found out about Eaglegrips, I ordered 1 of each style. Now that they are closing, I may buy another of each. I really like the finish and how strong the teeth are compared to all the others.They 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.
There is no tool more abused and modified and beat on at my shop and I’ve seen the same at every shop I have been at.
They are where you want to be if you can knock them out for $20 and make a profit at that, precisely because they are so abused and regularly broken that they are a consumable and thus the manufacturer gets to sell a lot more pairs.Locking pliers are probably the last tool I would want to open up a factory/manufacturing line/whatever on. People absolutely destroy these tools on the daily and I cannot see how anyone in that situation would want to spend upwards of $50 each. There is no tool more abused and modified and beat on at my shop and I’ve seen the same at every shop I have been at. I love US tools but dude, locking pliers are not where you want to be.
Ah, I forgot about the flathead screwdrivers. I won’t loan mine out at work because they are the only ones in the shop that aren’t chipped, split, bent, reground, or held together with electrical tape and a prayer. A screwdriver’s existence I would not wish on anyone.Screwdriver?
I actually agree with your statement.Locking pliers are probably the last tool I would want to open up a factory/manufacturing line/whatever on. People absolutely destroy these tools on the daily and I cannot see how anyone in that situation would want to spend upwards of $50 each. There is no tool more abused and modified and beat on at my shop and I’ve seen the same at every shop I have been at. I love US tools but dude, locking pliers are not where you want to be.
The Grip-on rebrands never went anywhere. When we wear out the Malco ones we’ll have to settle for Grip-on replacements.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.
I don’t agree with the assumption that the existence of a cheaper, lower quality product rules out the possibility that a premium product could also succeed. I mean, Skechers exists and yet Christian Louboutin is still worth $1.6 billion. He sells thousand dollar shoes and people line right up.Locking pliers are probably the last tool I would want to open up a factory/manufacturing line/whatever on. People absolutely destroy these tools on the daily and I cannot see how anyone in that situation would want to spend upwards of $50 each. There is no tool more abused and modified and beat on at my shop and I’ve seen the same at every shop I have been at. I love US tools but dude, locking pliers are not where you want to be.
Yeah, the financials must have been really ugly for them to write off that kind of loss after less than 2 years of production. The product is great, so it was all pricing and profitability that killed it. Hopefully the plant gets bought and turned around but would anyone want to work there at this point? They went under twice in 15 years.One thing that really hit me in that article? Said when they bought the plant 2017 there were state tax breaks & incentives and since not all the requirements were met they may have to pay some back.
That means they took a complete bath on this venture. New machinery too? Sounds like a money pit.
Have to admit I'm only familiar with the eagle grip thing from seeing the name here. After that popped in my feed today I looked at the pricing and yeah, geez $50 locking pliers..?
It's like the fortune teller that goes out of business... they didn't know I wasn't coming?
Yeah, the financials must have been really ugly for them to write off that kind of loss after less than 2 years of production. The product is great, so it was all pricing and profitability that killed it. Hopefully the plant gets bought and turned around but would anyone want to work there at this point? They went under twice in 15 years.
Since SO was a branded run, they probably have a healthy inventory that will take quite some time to deplete.The Grip-on rebrands never went anywhere. When we wear out the Malco ones we’ll have to settle for Grip-on replacements.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but those retailers don't accept items from manufacturers. Suppliers fill entire sections and profits are the only thing that matters.I'm sad to hear this, I had bought some and was planning to buy more.
They are hands down the best locking pliers I've ever handled. I don't care about the price. They were just really nice tools.
I agree the absolutely dropped the ball marketing these and getting them in front of the public. The only place I ever could buy them was from Snap-on and Harry Epstein.
I bet if they'd put them in the box stores and common hardwares with the price maybe $10 less they would've sold a bunch more than they did.
I mean, yeah, but you can go to the supplier and push your products to them.Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but those retailers don't accept items from manufacturers. Suppliers fill entire sections and profits are the only thing that matters.
Malco can't just go to home depot and make a deal, even if they already have some Malco stuff in the store.
Looks aren't nearly as important as function, quality and useability and Malco had that in spades over Irwin.A vice grip is a tool you intentionally beat the **** out of, you don't put in in a jewelry box. TOPTUL makes a good vice grip I bought by the box (normally that's 10) and I got these really cheap (I can tell you that the box of 10 cost less than one Eagle Grip) since I was a distributor. I've destroyed the appearance of many by simply using them for what they're made for WELDING. They still work but they do look like **** which is what I expected. It's different from a Snap-On wrench which looks so pretty once you wipe the grease off. Vice Grips used as Vice Grips never look pretty since welding spatter never looks pretty.
If it ain't broke, why fix it? The original Petersen grips are the ones to copy if you're going to copy one.Malco should have made these a "limited special edition" and then offered a less pretty version for a lower cost. They don't need to have all that chrome, certainly not on the jaws.
They were also IDENTICAL to the classic Vise-Grips. That's nostalgic, but the thing is EVERY tool brand has a clone of those pliers, since the patent has expired. They could have engineered a new feature, or something unique for the regular line. They were durable, they were pretty, but you can get Bremens for less than $10, and Proto (rebranded Grip-Ons) for less than $30.