bwringer
Well-known member
They're a little different, but not fundamentally much different. And they're still largely sheet metal.The Eagle Grips are not "wobbly, janky, or crude" by any stretch, but if you're looking for a different design all together, check out the Facom Lock Grips.
Just a guess, but... the Malco pliers looked EXACTLY the same as the same ol' Irwin design that later got sold to China and made out of cheese, then became the generic default for hundreds of cheap off-brands that also look exactly the same from two feet away. It's only fairly recently that pretty decent versions made in Taiwan have arrived on the scene (Milwaukee and Bremen at HF); again, exactly, or nearly exactly, the same design.Sure, after the Malco $45-55 "best in the market" product not selling enough to keep a factory running, someone needs to market an all forged, super precise, $50+ locking plier. Because the $45 Malco's flew off the shelves. Sounds like a great business opportunity, even if you can make them in China and try to sell them for $35 vs the $10-15 competition. Locking pliers do not need to have the same jaw play that a single-hinge-joint forged and fully machined pliers do; that's not required for their purpose. Yeah, it'd be nice, but no one will pay for it.
Yes, the Malcos are made to a much higher standard, and are instantly and obviously better tools up close and in the hand, but aside from we few brethren and sistren huddled here, hardly anyone else can tell the difference, and even fewer are willing to pay for it. It was a noble but obviously doomed effort.
Still, Snap-On, Knipex/Orbis, Tsunoda, Engineer (and other Japanese brands), and now even HF's Icon brand prove that there is a steady market for higher-end pliers in general.
There is room for a fundamentally better and visually distinct locking pliers design that is NOT made from sheet metal.
So where is it? Even Knipex's locking pliers are the exact same damn janky pinchy sheet metal design and mechanism, but with a release lever painted red: https://www.knipex.com/products/grip-pliers
Like, woooooooo.
Obviously, these pliers, and those from other good brands are usually higher quality in the details like hardness of the teeth, but where is the Great Leap Forward in locking pliers? Even the Facom Lock Grips (and many others) are not innovations, just variations on a theme around the exact same mechanism.