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Malco Eagle Grip pliers

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Steve_P

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"Your our only hope Obiwan!" In this case that would be Snap-On but I don't think they could sell enough of them to support an entire factory making them.

SO already hasn't sold enough to keep Malco going, and this was the "out of the gate" and "just opened" surge. And now that's over. The only hope would be for SO to buy the tooling and equipment, incorporate it into one of their factories, and run it for a week a month. But .... why do that vs just going back to grip on? Maybe they will buy the tooling, but that's a major commitment and they will need the space. They are certainly not going to keep a dedicated factory going because that's not currently working.
 

Mr_B

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^
Eaglegrip only made 4 plier variants and 2 clamp variants, that was part of the failure .
those 6 variants are done by everyone and at rock bottom cost .
Rather disapointing Malco through in the towel with very little real effort make the facility workable .
It would be a good facility for locking pliers/grips/clamps and general high end pliers if someone got interest but most won't as easier profits outsource to taiwan/china or spain currently but things are changing globally .
Snapon dumped gripon soon as eaglegrip out the gate, was good reason for that, gripon not that durable or cheap (they do have a great product range/innovation though) .
Was always amazed SnapOn didn't do locking pliers in house .
1000 pieces of each inventory not much either, visegrips new old stock was probably more than that decade+ after it closed .
Sad to see it failed so quickly but I think Malco can be blamed for inept effort in making it workable .
 
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Odd-job

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I'd like to wish they are having one of those fake "going out of business" sales that furniture stores always have... but alas must be tough for some of the employees heading into the holidays.

Like some of the other members, this might convince me to take the plunge. Hoping Jori stocks up enough to last until HJE day. Only 8 more months :)
 

GeoBruin

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I'd like to wish they are having one of those fake "going out of business" sales that furniture stores always have... but alas must be tough for some of the employees heading into the holidays.

Like some of the other members, this might convince me to take the plunge. Hoping Jori stocks up enough to last until HJE day. Only 8 more months :)
I was going to say all this hoarding could end up righting the ship but I think it's all existing inventory. Sounds like they already shut down the line and couldn't just increase capacity to meet this demand.

Speaking of hoarding, we all have to be at fault here. We griped for years about the lack of good US locking pliers and when someone finally tooled up to make them (with all the costs associated with running that kind of operation on US soil), we all of a sudden decided our import pliers were good enough. I'm as guilty as the next person. I have a drawer full of every locking plier Tekton makes and I supplement with HF Bremen when I need something new/different. It wasn't until the OP posted his initial message about the plant shutting down a while back that I decided to jump in. And I'll admit, when they showed up, I was tempted to leave them in the box.

Anyway, there's been plenty of armchair manufacturing and economics discussion in this thread. For my part, I guess I naively assume that if someone is going to fund something like this, they need to see a business plan based on market research before they jump in. Who knows how global supply chain issues, steel prices, labor shortages and inflation played into the scenario but I think we can all admit it's been a tough couple years to launch a manufacturing operation.
 
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JradM

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Speaking of hoarding, we all have to be at fault here. We griped for years about the lack of good US locking pliers and when someone finally tooled up to make them (with all the costs associated with running that kind of operation on US soil), we all of a sudden decided our import pliers were good enough.
It's true, BUT - when we all said we wanted the USA pliers of yesteryear, I doubt anyone predicted the extreme price tag.

I'm in Canada. These launched at ~$80 and I thought "well, maybe there will be a sale eventually and I don't need them THAT bad". Now they're $144. No thank you.

At $50, I would own a couple - but I'm still not going to fill a drawer.
 

neophyte

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I was going to say all this hoarding could end up righting the ship but I think it's all existing inventory. Sounds like they already shut down the line and couldn't just increase capacity to meet this demand.

Speaking of hoarding, we all have to be at fault here. We griped for years about the lack of good US locking pliers and when someone finally tooled up to make them (with all the costs associated with running that kind of operation on US soil), we all of a sudden decided our import pliers were good enough. I'm as guilty as the next person. I have a drawer full of every locking plier Tekton makes and I supplement with HF Bremen when I need something new/different. It wasn't until the OP posted his initial message about the plant shutting down a while back that I decided to jump in. And I'll admit, when they showed up, I was tempted to leave them in the box.

Anyway, there's been plenty of armchair manufacturing and economics discussion in this thread. For my part, I guess I naively assume that if someone is going to fund something like this, they need to see a business plan based on market research before they jump in. Who knows how global supply chain issues, steel prices, labor shortages and inflation played into the scenario but I think we can all admit it's been a tough couple years to launch a manufacturing operation.
The Eagle Grip pliers are the same design used and made for 60+ years, at a cost 2 or 3 times that of German made or basic style French made, or Japanese made, or Spanish made, locking pliers.
Import pliers from all those countries likely incur extra import fees as well, and while I’m not sure about wage cost in Japan or Spain, I doubt German or French wages are lower than the US wages.
The number of styles were also severely limited.
 

neophyte

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I was going to say all this hoarding could end up righting the ship but I think it's all existing inventory. Sounds like they already shut down the line and couldn't just increase capacity to meet this demand.

Speaking of hoarding, we all have to be at fault here. We griped for years about the lack of good US locking pliers and when someone finally tooled up to make them (with all the costs associated with running that kind of operation on US soil), we all of a sudden decided our import pliers were good enough. I'm as guilty as the next person. I have a drawer full of every locking plier Tekton makes and I supplement with HF Bremen when I need something new/different. It wasn't until the OP posted his initial message about the plant shutting down a while back that I decided to jump in. And I'll admit, when they showed up, I was tempted to leave them in the box.

Anyway, there's been plenty of armchair manufacturing and economics discussion in this thread. For my part, I guess I naively assume that if someone is going to fund something like this, they need to see a business plan based on market research before they jump in. Who knows how global supply chain issues, steel prices, labor shortages and inflation played into the scenario but I think we can all admit it's been a tough couple years to launch a manufacturing operation.
The Eagle Grip pliers are the same design used and made for 60+ years, at a cost 2 or 3 times that of German made or basic style French made, or Japanese made, or Spanish made, locking pliers.
Import pliers from all those countries likely incur extra import fees as well, and while I’m not sure about wage cost in Japan or Spain, I doubt German or French wages are lower than the US wages.
The number of styles were also severely limited.
 

reader2580

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The Eagle Grip pliers are the same design used and made for 60+ years, at a cost 2 or 3 times that of German made or basic style French made, or Japanese made, or Spanish made, locking pliers.
Just because you are using an old design doesn't necessarily mean cost savings. My understanding is Malco only used the same building as the old Vice-Grip factory and none of the old Vice-Grip equipment was used. (The building may have been empty when Malco took it over. I don't recall.) You would think that new(er) equipment could have lead to some cost savings.
 

neophyte

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So
Just because you are using an old design doesn't necessarily mean cost savings. My understanding is Malco only used the same building as the old Vice-Grip factory and none of the old Vice-Grip equipment was used. (The building may have been empty when Malco took it over. I don't recall.) You would think that new(er) equipment could have lead to some cost savings.
Sorry,
My point was that the Malco Eagle Grip pliers were essentially the same exact design that had been available for decades, and produced in the millions, or tens of millions, or maybe more, and which still occasionally show up in unused condition in Petersen packaging.
This was also the same exact design almost every other company that produces locking pliers starts out making.
You can even get Stainless steel, and Non-Sparking Beryllium Copper versions, and Stainless Steel versions made to high quality medical standards for surgeons, and possibly even titanium versions.
The Eagle Grip pliers may have been “the best” locking pliers made to the classic Petersen design, but essentially they were a high end niche version equivalent to Nepros tools, or only needed buy someone who needs the absolute top quality version for some reason.
That’s not going to get huge sales.
When the Eagle Grip pliers were first actually for sale, I think the price was around $60+ , which put the pliers in the price range of the Facom 500 design, which has a four position adjustment, that allows the jaws to open extra wide, and provide extra utility.
The Facom 500s offer advantages and extra utility over the standard locking plier design, so there’s a reason to spend extra. Also, you can or at least used to be able to purchase replacement jaws for the Facoms.
Some of the weird German designs that cost more have jaws that open parallel (a design that has long since been out of patent), or heavy forged swiveling jaws for gripping non parallel flat surfaces.
Newer German locking plier designs have modified jaws that can grip a variety of shapes rather than just flat or round.

A lot of users just use locking pliers for locking a couple pieces together for welding or some other messy job.
These users will pay extra, but usually for designs that clamp stuff they can’t clamp with the regular locking plier designs.
For just clamping a couple of pieces of sheet metal together, having six pairs of locking pliers is better than one pair, even if the pliers aren’t as good.
 

neophyte

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I should probably say that I think the main advantage to the high quality Eagle Grip pliers were certain specific tasks.
If you have to deal with tough, hardened steel fasteners, or other parts, that may have significantly corroded in place, such as bolts, or rods or pins, etc., and need to grip those parts firmly to try to torque or hammer or vibrate those parts out undef high stress, and possibly involving lots or torque, than the quality of a pair of Eagle Grip pliers makes sense.
These are jobs that otherwise might be done with a pipe wrench, or by welding something onto the fastener.
This is like buying a specialty pair or two of pliers from a manufacturer like Knipex though.
 

drtyler

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^
Eaglegrip only made 4 plier variants and 2 clamp variants, that was part of the failure .
those 6 variants are done by everyone and at rock bottom cost .
Rather disapointing Malco through in the towel with very little real effort make the facility workable .
It would be a good facility for locking pliers/grips/clamps and general high end pliers if someone got interest but most won't as easier profits outsource to taiwan/china or spain currently but things are changing globally .
Snapon dumped gripon soon as eaglegrip out the gate, was good reason for that, gripon not that durable or cheap (they do have a great product range/innovation though) .
Was always amazed SnapOn didn't do locking pliers in house .
1000 pieces of each inventory not much either, visegrips new old stock was probably more than that decade+ after it closed .
Sad to see it failed so quickly but I think Malco can be blamed for inept effort in making it workable .
Shame they didn't hire Mr_B to right the ship.
 

Mr_B

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Shame they didn't hire Mr_B to right the ship.
wouldn't of had hire me, my consultancy would of been offered free of charge lol, really ***** see this dewitt plant in a mess again and Malco's production run time got be a record lol . they spent 4 times as long getting it all together as they did making anything and when you only make 2 basic plier sizes and 1 clamp size that a common standard that already saturated you can't expect mass sales.
gripon, facom and the germans give a free example on what needs to be done and was lot of versions of old style vise-grips and speciality locking grips that people crying out to for ... absolute shameful effort .
 

dnschmidt

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OK, I never thought it was possible for someone to screw the pooch worst than S-K or SBD with respect to Craftsman but clearly I was wrong again.
 

reader2580

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I bought a pair of HF Bremen locking pliers recently because I needed something right away. I couldn’t wait to order Eagle Grip. The Bremen are actually really nice. I had to look at a couple of them to get a pair with jaws ground properly.
 

Ton ton

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wouldn't of had hire me, my consultancy would of been offered free of charge lol, really ***** see this dewitt plant in a mess again and Malco's production run time got be a record lol . they spent 4 times as long getting it all together as they did making anything and when you only make 2 basic plier sizes and 1 clamp size that a common standard that already saturated you can't expect mass sales.
gripon, facom and the germans give a free example on what needs to be done and was lot of versions of old style vise-grips and speciality locking grips that people crying out to for ... absolute shameful effort .
This is a shame that you weren't able to connect with Malco before they shut down.
 

Mr_B

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This is a shame that you weren't able to connect with Malco before they shut down.
I spoke with Malco about a year ago, they said all right things but none of it turned into anything but words .
Pliers I had from them are proper nice in use besides the plating, would of bought more variants if they had made them .
Would of expected it be hard going but you ain't got a chance when only got 3 base models with 2 variations on each that every low cost manufacturer covering .
Higher end price and targeting pro users requires more speciality products and a full range and time build reputation and get the products in the right sales platforms .
Hope someone takes it on and does a better effort, hopefully not the chinese lol .
Going be a small turkey for lot of dewitt employees this holiday season ...
Really is a downer when a company like Malco throw in the towel in about 18 months of production .
 
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Bubba Fett

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OK, I never thought it was possible for someone to screw the pooch worst than S-K or SBD with respect to Craftsman but clearly I was wrong again.
It's almost as if creating/managing US manufacturing during a post-pandemic economy with labor and supply shortages while remaining profitable is hard or something.

I bought a pair of HF Bremen locking pliers recently because I needed something right away. I couldn’t wait to order Eagle Grip. The Bremen are actually really nice. I had to look at a couple of them to get a pair with jaws ground properly.
They are the best bang for the buck for locking pliers. Made in Taiwan, but that's better than China.
 
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Rosso

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I was chatting to my Snap on dealer today (im in the UK) he checked stock levels for the UK warehouse, there are only 16 of the 10 inch ones left in stock, I'd imagine once those are gone that's it.

Shame as to be honest they are fantastic. As a full time tech working on German cars the ones i have have so far been brilliant.
 

2ndGearRubber

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I was chatting to my Snap on dealer today (im in the UK) he checked stock levels for the UK warehouse, there are only 16 of the 10 inch ones left in stock, I'd imagine once those are gone that's it.

Shame as to be honest they are fantastic. As a full time tech working on German cars the ones i have have so far been brilliant.

I mentioned Malco closing down production with my dealer. I'm hoping SO is sitting on some stock for warranty purpose. My dealers have always stocked irwin pliers over the grip on variety. Grip are are decent. But a big downgrade over the Malco.

I bought the 4 toothed locking pliers in snap on trim, 7" and 10", flat and curved jaw. They're amazing quality pliers, they just WORK and actually grip stuff.
 

Steve_P

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I think that if they could've priced these at ~$35, they would've been viable. But $50 is just too much, obviously, no matter how great they are. As I posted before, I'm not sure who at Malco thought they could sell enough $50 locking pliers to keep a factory going even 40 hours a week when imports are $10-15.
 

Steve_P

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I mentioned Malco closing down production with my dealer. I'm hoping SO is sitting on some stock for warranty purpose. My dealers have always stocked irwin pliers over the grip on variety. Grip are are decent. But a big downgrade over the Malco.

I bought the 4 toothed locking pliers in snap on trim, 7" and 10", flat and curved jaw. They're amazing quality pliers, they just WORK and actually grip stuff.

SO is not going to keep stock solely reserved for warranty- they're going to sell what they have and that will be it.
 

Indexmill

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I agree that there are multiple use cases for locking pliers, where the quality requirements vary widely.

  • clamping for welding - any cheap ************* will work just fine. When thay get all gobbed up, toss em and buy some more for $9.99.
  • Actually grabbing onto stripped nuts and bolts because they are your almost last-ditch chance to get the fucker out - seems like this use case warrants a high quality, good grade of steel, sharp milled heat treated teeth, with lots of clamp force... to get those pesky stripped fuckers out so you can save the godamn day with whatever they came out of. $50.00 ok here... all day long.
  • other use cases that I can't think of at this time. (like a crank for an old car window shaft that has lost the crank).
Like everything in this world; one size does not fit all. use the right tool for the right job.
 

dnschmidt

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I agree that there are multiple use cases for locking pliers, where the quality requirements vary widely.

  • clamping for welding - any cheap ************* will work just fine. When thay get all gobbed up, toss em and buy some more for $9.99.
  • Actually grabbing onto stripped nuts and bolts because they are your almost last-ditch chance to get the fucker out - seems like this use case warrants a high quality, good grade of steel, sharp milled heat treated teeth, with lots of clamp force... to get those pesky stripped fuckers out so you can save the godamn day with whatever they came out of. $50.00 ok here... all day long.
  • other use cases that I can't think of at this time. (like a crank for an old car window shaft that has lost the crank).
Like everything in this world; one size does not fit all. use the right tool for the right job.
I don't think that a Vice Grip grips any better than a Knipex Cobra for case #2.
 

four.cycle

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Indexmill said:
Actually grabbing onto stripped nuts and bolts because they are your almost last-ditch chance to get the fucker out - seems like this use case warrants a high quality, good grade of steel, sharp milled heat treated teeth, with lots of clamp force... to get those pesky stripped fuckers out so you can save the godamn day with whatever they came out of. $50.00 ok here... all day long.

^ It's for this reason I will most likely be procuring a couple pairs of them. The video comparison seems to indicate there's a significant difference in the way they perform where it concerns gripping power. If that is indeed the case, and that $50.00 pair of pliers is able to hold onto those frozen studs that have thwarted all other efforts, then yes, they most certainly are worth every penny.

Considering what I've thrown away on Tekton, Pittsburgh, Irwin, and other trash, what the hell? This looks like one of those "cry once" kind of deals. I'm willing to risk it if it saves any skin on my or my buddy's hands - we don't heal up as fast as we used to.

- BK
 

neophyte

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I don't think that a Vice Grip grips any better than a Knipex Cobra for case #2.
You can lock the locking plier on, then use a bar on the handle for extra torque.
This especially might be useful on a hardened round stud or rod that was jammed in place.

There are also locking pliers that have hammer attachments that screw into the adjustment bolt.
A factory or shop made attachment could then use the better grip to pull items, which is far less effective with Knipex Cobra pliers.
 

dnschmidt

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You can lock the locking plier on, then use a bar on the handle for extra torque.
This especially might be useful on a hardened round stud or rod that was jammed in place.

There are also locking pliers that have hammer attachments that screw into the adjustment bolt.
A factory or shop made attachment could then use the better grip to pull items, which is far less effective with Knipex Cobra pliers.
Dude, I live in Arizona. We simply ask the bolt to come out and it willingly obliges. Life is good out here in the desert except for July and August when it sort of *****.
 

dnschmidt

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Bremen and Milwaukee killed Eagle Grip. Both are completely serviceable and cost 1/3 as much. Festool has a niche in that their stuff always has the best vacuum extraction. I don't believe that Eagle Grip had that unique feature.
 

LOW1

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Could it be that the original Vice Grip folks foresaw this outcome and for that reason began to manufacture overseas?
 

bimmer630

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I would say if you really want some of these locking pliers you should buy whatever you can, whenever you can. I doubt inventory at various tool dealers will ever be restocked again. According to the guy who posted in this thread who actually lives in that town and has friends who work there..... it sounds like they're pretty much done with production at this point. I was told via email from Malco that any remaining inventory will be sold off at NORMAL pricing, not at reduced pricing that was mentioned elsewhere in this thread.
According to the recent video by HJE, they are in production until the end of the year and HJE will continue to buy them as long as they can
 

AA/FC

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According to the recent video by HJE, they are in production until the end of the year and HJE will continue to buy them as long as they can
Okay..... but the end of the year is only a month and a half away so like I said, get them while you can. Lol.

There is a large on-line dealer for Malco Eagle Grips located about two miles from my place.... last I heard from them was they wanted to place one last large order with Malco before they complely stopped production. The guy I talked with wasn't even sure if Malco would accept their final order.....
 
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