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Pliers; How Many Is Too Many?

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Outlawmws

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Picked up 3 pair of Utica's. Same place, all with different Utica markings


Utica 1.jpg



Closeups of markings:

1 Utica Pliers UTC.jpg



Sorry for this one - having difficulties with the light and lost the sun for the day:

2 Utica Pliers Spelled + Pac bell.jpg




3 Utica Pliers Spelled.jpg
 

Mintgrun

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I'm a sucker for nicely made slip-joint pliers. According to Google, IGARASHI means "50 storms" in Japanese. Some of the IGARASHI pliers are marked IPS instead of YK, but I haven't looked into the difference. They currently offer some very nice soft-jaw pliers. I'd love to add some of those to my collection. (assuming I can find them used/dirt-cheap).

IMG_2150.jpeg

The nut on the pivot is different than any I've seen. I think the two depressions make it a lock-nut and it has two flats to grip/adjust it. They're fine as-are though.

IMG_2151.jpeg IMG_2152.jpeg

I like it when stamps on tools make the metal look soft. There's no way the inset JAPAN is rubbing off!

It seems like tools made in Japan are underappreciated, but maybe it's just that they're often too new to qualify as vintage. These may be too, but I'm bending the rules.

Tom
 

AreBeeBee

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It seems like tools made in Japan are underappreciated, but maybe it's just that they're often too new to qualify as vintage. These may be too, but I'm bending the rules.

Tom

You raise a point I've wondered about off and on for some years now. Setting aside pure collecting for completeness, at what point did tools imported from Japan to North America start being considered seriously as tools for use?
 

four.cycle

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^ depends upon the brand.
Truecraft and Cen-Tech were actually bringing some respectable stuff over in the early 1970s, most of which was ignored by American consumers simply because of our tendency toward tribalism.

The change to Japan becoming a leader happened about 20-25 years ago when they started doing some real innovative work on pliers and screwdrivers. I think a good part of that was driven by what was happening in Taiwan at the same time - I think a lot of them realized that "cheap and junky" wasn't going to cut it for the long haul.

Just my lousy two cents, of course.
 

Mintgrun

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I realize that some of the earliest Japanese offerings seem a little chintzy but later stuff is very nice. Probably not worth trying to sort it out in this thread, but I'd find a dedicated Tools of Japan thread intriguing. EDIT- thank you for the info 4C.

IMG_2153.jpegIMG_2154.jpegIMG_2155.jpeg


The pair on the left are nicer to my eye, based on the pivot nut/bolt and grip style. They put the nut/bolt in backward on the other pair. They're both marked HM and the left one's also marked KOWA. I assume both pairs came in a car or motorcycle tool kit, but that's just a guess. They're just over five inches long.

Tom
 

Private Lugnutz

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It seems like tools made in Japan are underappreciated,
...I'd find a dedicated Tools of Japan thread intriguing.
There is an excellent and long Mega thread, packed with proponents and aficionados, up on the General Board, Tom!

As with its European counterpart, also located up on the General Board...

...it tends to be 90% modern or current and 10% vintage, but I have used them both, occasionally, to ask questions and make some points.
 

Mintgrun

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Thanks for the info, Lugz. I don't leave this forum though. Perhaps I'm a big agoraphobic? Maybe this'll encourage me to venture out... someday.
 

Private Lugnutz

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I don't leave this forum though. Perhaps I'm a big agoraphobic? Maybe this'll encourage me to venture out... someday.
HAHA! I hear you. I only go on highly selective and carefully planned forays! :)

The only threads in my Watched list that are not located down here in the sane, gentlemanly confines of the Vintage Tools Discussion forum are the annual 'Garage Sale' thread, where I always post my flea market finds first, as a lot, no close-ups, no details, and the 'Hammertime!', 'VISES' and 'Show your oiler cans' threads, because those both preceded the great schism and there really are no equivalent mega hammers, vises, or oilers threads down here. The 'Hammertime!' thread is probably at least 50/50 Modern/Vintage despite it being up there in the madness and mayhem that is General Tools Discussion. In my opinion, there is no reason for the 'VISES' or the 'Oilers' threads to be up there. Easily 90% of the content on those threads is vintage. But they're kind of stuck in place in the wrong place now and I am so used to accessing them via my Watched lists that it doesn't even feel like I am leaving Vintage.

Tangentially, I am glad you said this, though, because it intersects with a subject @four.cycle and I have discussed in the open and on PM concerning the different ways that GJ'ers habitually access and read the forum and the contents of the A-Z Index in the Sticky.
 

four.cycle

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@Mintgrun - another hidden gem was "LOBTEX" - makers of the "Lobster" and "New Lobster" brand tools. I have one of their adjustables - probably made in the 70s - far better than what "Crescent" is cranking out in the current era by a long shot. (And that's a U.S. made "Crescent", btw - you can confirm with Don just how junky it is - he got suckered into buying one too.)
 

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AreBeeBee

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I realize that some of the earliest Japanese offerings seem a little chintzy but later stuff is very nice. Probably not worth trying to sort it out in this thread, but I'd find a dedicated Tools of Japan thread intriguing. EDIT- thank you for the info 4C.

IMG_2153.jpegIMG_2154.jpegIMG_2155.jpeg


The pair on the left are nicer to my eye, based on the pivot nut/bolt and grip style. They put the nut/bolt in backward on the other pair. They're both marked HM and the left one's also marked KOWA. I assume both pairs came in a car or motorcycle tool kit, but that's just a guess. They're just over five inches long.

Tom
HM = Honda Motors, and I think the "motors" were motorcycles. Happy to be informed more precisely....
 

Outlawmws

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They currently offer some very nice soft-jaw pliers.

I hve the IPS plastic insert pliers in both slip joint and Water pump styles. they are not super heavy duty compared to top quality toolmakers, but more than good enough for the work the plastic jaws that are used for.

Why did I get them? Working on Lanterns that sometimes have stuck fuel caps and the like where I'm trying to preserve the finish. Ive used them elsewhere as well now I have them.

If you get them, buy the spare jaws with them. buying them by themselves is not cheap...


at what point did tools imported from Japan to North America start being considered seriously as tools for use?

Like broad categorization, , they had **** tools and good ones. Most of the car or motorcycle supplied tools are decent to very good where forged and not stamped steel. But the ones made for the grocery store gondolas of dollar tools (think most of Globemaster) were not, and most seen were like those.

Have they improved? vastly. (think Mitutoyo...) India and Pakistan now fill most of the cheap **** tools; China I won't get into as I'm not a MIC fan for any tools, and where I can avoid them anything else. For a while that became very difficult, but its getting better if you take an ABC approach.

I never had many tools from China to begin with, but I think I've purged them out other than the "creepers" that come in "box buys", and those get tossed into a bag for the occasional yard sale (About a year back I took everything in that bag and gave it to one of my "regular" sellers that worked both his house and the local HS Flea. - He was happy and so was I.)
 

Mintgrun

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Here's my little array of little ignition pliers.

IMG_2174.jpeg

The JSB 1259 pliers were made in Japan and have JSB JAPAN forged into the inside of the handles. The texture is very pronounced on the grips and they're on the larger side too; so they feel quite capable, for such a small tool.

IMG_2175.jpeg IMG_2180.jpeg

I found the Challenger 3204 by PROTO pair yesterday. They're quite dainty. At first, I assumed someone had ground the tips down because they're so pointy, but they're still chrome plated, so they came that way.

The other PROTO pair next to them in the group shot had an owner whittle them down, so they're narrower than they once were.

The little green-gripped Diamond pliers are marked HL 14 P PAT. 3739664 (forging technique) granted in 1973, so they could possibly be vintage... That pair has a rivet, as opposed to a nut and bolt.

https://www.datamp.org/patents/displayPatent.php?number=3739664&typeCode=0

The Globemasters were made in Germany (W). They're a bit clunky by comparison.

The Japanese JSB pliers inspired this post.
 

Mike'smeatshop

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IMG_4162.jpegIMG_4163.jpegIMG_4164.jpegIMG_4165.jpeg
They are definitely steel. I noticed an interesting thing about the pliers when I was taking pictures. They are slip joint pliers but changing to the wider position makes them not work. They just jam up.
-Don
They won't work for larger bite when you adjust the slip joint?
 
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MisterEd

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Kraeuter 1973-7 Mechanics’ Side Cutting Slip Joint Pliers
 

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MisterEd

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Kraeuter 1830-5 Electricians’ Side Cutting Pliers
 

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LesserSon

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IMG_1507.jpeg
Harrold pliers. I have seen similarly-forged pliers made in Germany, Poland, Japan, etc. For a while I was actively buying Happi-Time (made for Sears kids’ tool kits) or variations of the Harrold logo, but now mostly only buy models I haven’t got (like the new-to-me dikes) IF the price is ridiculously low. Functionally, they are not bad tools, but there is an unrefined quality to their design.
 

Private Lugnutz

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I was going to flip a coin on where to post these - heads for Herbrand, tails for Utica, but then I remembered this thread! :)

Extra heavy-duty 10" combination slip joints with a wire cutter and those extra pipette jaws out near the tip.
 

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d42jeep

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I found these paint covered lineman’s pliers at a Sunday garage sale. It wasn’t possible to tell who made them until I spent a couple of hours cleaning off the stubborn paint. They turned out to be marked Sears 3079 with a BF code. Made in Japan. Had I known, I might have left them behind but they seem to be decent, quality wise.


IMG_1553.jpeg
IMG_4539.jpegIMG_4556.jpeg-Don
 
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