aviation snips;
used for cutting thicker materials
notching
cutting wire
they work for fish mouthing tubing
leaving stress risers on the edge of the cut
a couple of sets hang on the wall......visitors get to use them
for cutting straight;
Wiss #18, 13 3/4" long
Wiss #6 1/2, 16" long or the even bigger #7s
trimming;
PEXTO #15 Hawk Bills
cutting curves;
the basic all around Duck Bills 12 3/4" long any American brand will do they are pretty much the same
then its the exotics.....ones that cut right or left (the same pair)
my Uncle's 1927 H. Lembke from Berlin
my Father's 1928 Thuillier-LeFrants NOTHING will turn with them, Dad ordered them with tool steel blades, salesman said he was the only person that ever ordered the special blades
I have 8 pairs of Thuillier LeFrants, some with the colorcase still on them
then there are the custom made ones by Pete Peterman;
cut perfectly straight or turn ~1/4" radius left (only)

a set came up 6 months ago $549 BIN, they are worth it, but I have my Father's and Grandfather's
sharpening tin snips;
there are 2 types, just like sissors
the good ones with a bend and a twist in the blades and a cam behind the pivot point, even the big old Wiss straight cutting ones have a cam.....not much but its there
and the rest......you have to look where the wear is
putting "tooth" back on blades de-glaze the coarse wheel on a bench grinder and turn the stone with your fingers use the corner adjust the tool rest so you're only hitting the last 0.050-0.060"
