To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Pliers; How Many Is Too Many?

Ayrhead

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 23, 2020
Messages
567
Location
Ontario
Knipex No. 11 Wire Stripping Pliers. I came across this tool today.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_3282.jpeg
    IMG_3282.jpeg
    585.3 KB · Views: 33
  • IMG_3284.jpeg
    IMG_3284.jpeg
    616.1 KB · Views: 19
  • IMG_3286.jpeg
    IMG_3286.jpeg
    730.5 KB · Views: 12
  • IMG_3290.jpeg
    IMG_3290.jpeg
    515.1 KB · Views: 14
  • IMG_3291.jpeg
    IMG_3291.jpeg
    429.6 KB · Views: 14
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Steven 33

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2022
Messages
665
I couldn’t ID these little longnoses even after they came out of the evaporust. IMG_4766.jpegIMG_4767.jpegIMG_4768.jpegIMG_4769.jpeg
Other side.IMG_4770.jpeg
-Don
They look like barcalo. Marking would be like top right of the rivet in the first pic. If you squint real hard you might catch a glimmer of something. I have 100% success rate of seeing something. Just nowhere near that when it comes to actually seeing the right thing lol
 

Oregon Dave

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 16, 2023
Messages
298
I couldn’t ID these little longnoses even after they came out of the evaporust. IMG_4766.jpegIMG_4767.jpegIMG_4768.jpegIMG_4769.jpeg
Other side.IMG_4770.jpeg
-Don
That cross-hatched grip pattern was pretty common as you know; quite often with transverse end lines, that yours don’t seem to have. Some brands that I’m aware of without the end lines are: Diamond, Indestro, Plomb, Proto, and Vaco; my Barcalo’s do have them.
 

Eric Brown

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 14, 2024
Messages
678
Not sure about these. The seller called them seaming pliers. They are marked "GERMANY" and a word I can't figure out (second picture). They are about 9" long. The head is somewhat ball shaped with flat gripping areas about 1" across.

Received information from one of the companies:
 

Attachments

  • German Seaming 1.jpg
    German Seaming 1.jpg
    455.5 KB · Views: 35
  • German Seaming 2.jpg
    German Seaming 2.jpg
    443.7 KB · Views: 37
  • German Seaming 3.jpg
    German Seaming 3.jpg
    443.3 KB · Views: 35
  • German Seaming 4.jpg
    German Seaming 4.jpg
    205.1 KB · Views: 31
Last edited:

Mintgrun

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 7, 2015
Messages
2,134
Location
Kingston, Wa.
The top of the A is Above the flAt side.

1762798949448.png


Based on that listing, Giesen & Forsthoff may have been the manufacturer of your pliers, but a quick search shows scissors and razors, not pliers.
 

Oregon Dave

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 16, 2023
Messages
298
Not sure about these. The seller called them seaming pliers. They are marked "GERMANY" and a word I can't figure out (second picture). They are about 9" long. The head is somewhat ball shaped with flat gripping areas about 1" across.
Mintgrun’s Adoration looks like a match to me.

Seaming Pliers? Typically are use for sheet metal state-side; maybe those are for fabric. One thing for certain; the ball end and open space between the ball end and pivot are for a German reason; very practical in application.
 

Eric Brown

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 14, 2024
Messages
678
The top of the A is Above the flAt side.

1762798949448.png


Based on that listing, Giesen & Forsthoff may have been the manufacturer of your pliers, but a quick search shows scissors and razors, not pliers.
I agree with your Adoration. Now as to their use, I wonder if maybe these were heated, like a sad iron. Just a thought.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

LesserSon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,076
Location
PA USA
IMG_7609.jpegIMG_7610.jpegIMG_7608.jpeg
Looking at all those Witherby-marked pliers, I just had to have one. eBay obliged. I chose slip-joints because I have this grip pattern in longnose and regular dikes. I’ll keep an eye out for linesmans at the flea.
I think the last digit of Witherby model numbers, across multiple models, is the nominal length in inches.
 
Last edited:

Oregon Dave

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 16, 2023
Messages
298
IMG_7609.jpegIMG_7610.jpegIMG_7608.jpeg
Looking at all those Witherby-marked pliers, I just had to have one. eBay obliged. I chose slip-joints because I have this grip pattern in longnose and regular dikes. I’ll keep an eye out for linesmans at the flea.
I think the last digit of Witherby model numbers, across multiple models, is the nominal length in inches.
Great photography, as we have become accustom to from you.

I see the right side of the stamping is pretty light; but when you get time, is there possibly a letter ‘P’ after the 6 - would feel the world is in a more harmonious place if the plier length was pretty close to 6½”.

Will be curious if the lineman's pliers you find have a single transverse line at each end of the grip pattern.

Thanks - Again for all you share.
Especially like the pliers of your Grandfathers and the meat saw of your Grandmother’s. I have tools from my Dad, Grandfather, Uncles, and a Great Uncle - like having and using them; not for everyone, but is for me.
 

LesserSon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,076
Location
PA USA
I see the right side of the stamping is pretty light; but when you get time, is there possibly a letter ‘P’ after the 6 - would feel the world is in a more harmonious place if the plier length was pretty close to 6½”.
IMG_7612.jpeg
OAL is nearly 6-3/4”.
I know what you mean. I’ve looked, and my stamp is too light on that side to see. There is a ghost of something that could be a “9,” an “S,” or a “P.” I can’t see the “Y” of Witherby, nor the “D” of England, either. The “B” and the “N” preceding those letters are so faint, I might not recognize them if I didn’t know what they spelled.
There is a near-identical pair on eBay I also considered, with a better stamp that clearly has the “P.” I’m certain from comparing them that the stamps are identical.
IMG_7609.jpegIMG_7611.jpeg
But that seller did not remove the black vinyl tape nor photograph the grip pattern. I can see that it’s probably there, but not the condition. The grip pattern was the most important element to me.
Thank you for your other comments. I also
enjoy the sense of continuity from using my ancestral tools, even though they are not usually top quality.
 
Last edited:

LesserSon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,076
Location
PA USA
I found these diagonals at an estate sale yesterday. No indication of manufacturer but made in Sheffield England. Perhaps one of our UK contributors will recognize them. IMG_4717.jpeg
-Don
Are those 8”? And donyou think the model number reads 8112?
 

LesserSon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,076
Location
PA USA
@LesserSon -
Is not that "Nested diamonds meets arrow fletching" (your term) handle pattern on your Witherby the same as on a couple pairs of those Globemaster (Sheffield) units I sent to you? :unsure:

IMG_2883.jpeg
I am calling these “Globemaster,” though only the larger dikes have that unambiguously stamped on them. They all say “England,” and one says “Sheffield.” Some model numbers are visible. The grip pattern is what first caught my eye, combining fletching and nested diamonds. I have picked them up one at a time since then. Today I found the linesmans.
Here are the stamps, for the puzzle addicts:
IMG_2888.jpegIMG_2887.jpegIMG_2886.jpegIMG_2889.jpeg
The longnose are in the worst condition - utterly frozen when I got them. I beat them open and closed with liberal squirts of WD40 until they resumed their regular duties.
IMG_2881.jpeg

Thanks for sending me a fifth pair! Still no dupes. Alloy Artifacts had one pair shown on their Globemaster entry. I checked their guess of Footprint or Gordon as the Sheffield manufacturer, but none of what I’ve seen matches a grip pattern, nor, I think, the model numbers.
IMG_4137.jpegIMG_4136.jpeg
Yes! That’s why the ID @Oregon Dave gave to the heavy duty diagonal cutters posted by @d42jeep caught my attention.
Maybe when Don measures them, he can also post a pic of the grip pattern.
 

LesserSon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,076
Location
PA USA
Thank you, Don! Those are great.
I see Alloy Artifacts has a write up on Witherby. They conclude that Witherby is NOT a manufacturer, but a USA-trademarked brand for handtools imported from England.
So not surprising to find that same grip pattern on unbranded, Globemaster, and Witherby tools. I think it’s a good bet they came from one Sheffield manufacturer of pliers, but we don’t have a positive ID yet.
 

Oregon Dave

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 16, 2023
Messages
298
Thank you, Don! Those are great.
I see Alloy Artifacts has a write up on Witherby. They conclude that Witherby is NOT a manufacturer, but a USA-trademarked brand for handtools imported from England.
So not surprising to find that same grip pattern on unbranded, Globemaster, and Witherby tools. I think it’s a good bet they came from one Sheffield manufacturer of pliers, but we don’t have a positive ID yet.
We seem to share an interest in handle grip patterns; just found a new pattern for me at:


post #45 by Ayrhead
 

four.cycle

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2015
Messages
28,953
Location
Tacoma, Washington
^ correct. Witherby was an importer, not a manufacturer. I chased that one down on a "brad driver":

Witherby / Witherby Products / Witherby Tool Co., Trumbull, CT 1969 / Witherby Products Division, John H. Graham Co., 105 Duane St., New York, NY 1967 / importer of offshore-sourced hand tools / "One Hander" wrench, brad driver / https://progress-is-fine.blogspot.com/2017/07/vanished-tool-makers-witherby-england.html?m=1 /

Witherby / Witherby / "dog bone" wrench / https://progress-is-fine.blogspot.com/2024/02/witherby-dogbone-wrench.html / https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/gimmick-wrenches-tools.428536/page-5#post-10653097 /

I have ebay photos of Witherby-branded items from England, Germany, West Germany, Spain, Italy, and Japan. Note the address shown in the 1963 Witherby magazine ad is the same as that of John H. Graham & Co., New York, NY, another major importer of all manner of products.
 

Attachments

  • 1963 Hardware Age Witherby ad pp 111.jpg
    1963 Hardware Age Witherby ad pp 111.jpg
    552.7 KB · Views: 6
  • 1954 John H. Graham & Col. ad Jul 22 1954 pp.jpg
    1954 John H. Graham & Col. ad Jul 22 1954 pp.jpg
    134.4 KB · Views: 5
Last edited:

Oregon Dave

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 16, 2023
Messages
298
Thank you, Don! Those are great.
I see Alloy Artifacts has a write up on Witherby. They conclude that Witherby is NOT a manufacturer, but a USA-trademarked brand for handtools imported from England.
So not surprising to find that same grip pattern on unbranded, Globemaster, and Witherby tools. I think it’s a good bet they came from one Sheffield manufacturer of pliers, but we don’t have a positive ID yet.
Went to the AA website you referenced; noticed the Witherby 1855 4.5 Inch Side-Cutting Pliers with the handle grip pattern looking very close to that used by Germany’s Harry P. Will Co./Hoppe & Harry P. Will.

four.cycle just posted: “I have ebay photos of Witherby-branded items from England, Germany, West Germany, Spain, Italy, and Japan. Note the address shown in the 1963 Witherby magazine ad is the same as that of John H. Graham & Co., New York, NY, another major importer of all manner of products.”

Have also been on a wild goose chase re: Witherby/Sheffield/England.

For me another suspicion of an end of WWII entrepreneurial maneuver; Marshall Plan sub-chapter - Maybe a way to re-pay U.S. loans; as a country, at that time, we certainly didn’t have a shortage of quality tool-makers.
 
Last edited:

Debcrow

Well-known member
Joined
May 14, 2019
Messages
4,066
Location
New Mexico
Here are pictures of my PowerGrip Tool Co. pliers. Also marked Mountainair New Mexico, Pat Pending. Appear to be patent 2361607 (Oct 31, 1944 by Charles D. Daniels. Several oddities. Mine has a broken U-shaped strap with the name Jack Rhodes in script on the one side. The patent shows springs, but I don't see or feel any. I plan on repairing this. I don't think is so rare that fixing it would hurt the value. (Correct me if you think it should be left alone).
A little late, but I just ran across this post. My pair does not have springs either that I can feel.pg1.JPGpg2.JPG
 
Last edited:

Debcrow

Well-known member
Joined
May 14, 2019
Messages
4,066
Location
New Mexico
OK, here is one I am trying to ID. Just got it in a box of tools at a garage sale. Tried finding a similar on here and elsewhere with no luck.

The grip pattern reminds me of Proto. The U.S.A. in a hexagon seems to stir a memory of similar on a Diamond Calk tool I had except it was inside a stretched diamond shape.
What you see in the photo are the only markings. Next to the U.S.A. in hexagon is a small circle with a r in it for a registered trade mark I believe.
There is also a small 6 stamped there.
They do not look like high quality pliers.
Anyone know the maker? Thanks.plUSAem.JPGplUSEM.JPG
 

LesserSon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,076
Location
PA USA
I was trying to pump DATAMP dry of pliers handles (USA design patent class D8/58) and spotted this Barcalo grip pattern. Have not seen examples I can recall.
USD192449.pdf

Now, if I can figure how to get the USPTO site to generate a list of D8/58 links, we’d have a real reference for looking up grip patterns.
EDIT - I figured it out, but the classes and subclasses evolved over time, so there isn’t a one-stop look-up for ornamental plier handle grip patterns. :rolleyes:
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom