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Show us your pb swiss tools!

Dave455

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Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
5,802
Location
Sussex, England
Do the yellow ESD screwdrivers have the same spongy grip feeling as the regular Swissgrip Screwdrivers or are they hard plastic? I don't have ESD screwdrivers and I think I recall reading that somewhere...
Not sure about the ESD, but if you dislike the Santoprene (I don’t like it much) you are probably better off with the Multicraft handle shown below, or even the classic handle.94CD2A82-6FE2-4608-8824-48207E44DD74.jpeg
 
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1320

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Joined
Jan 3, 2018
Messages
899
Location
Arizona
No personal experience, but you can filter on their site and there's a "SwissGrip ESD handle" checkbox. It'll show you all the full sized handles and a mobile set.

Not sure about the ESD, but if you dislike the Santoprene (I don’t like it much) you are probably better off with the Multicraft handle shown below, or even the classic handle.94CD2A82-6FE2-4608-8824-48207E44DD74.jpeg

Yeah, I know they exist - What I wasn't sure of is if they had the same spongy texture as they Swissgrip handles - I know the shape is the same. I thought I had read that somewhere, but apparently it's not the case. I appreciate the input.
 

ricleh

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Joined
Nov 2, 2007
Messages
1,447
Location
Sacramento, CA
Some of my PB Swiss tools.
 

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ricleh

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Joined
Nov 2, 2007
Messages
1,447
Location
Sacramento, CA
@ricieh Nice collection. Why so many duplicates? Do you work in the industry? Thanks
I have a problem with laying down stuff and forgetting where I last put it. I have lots of spares of everything so I can keep on working even if I misplace a tool. I also hate it when I lose a tool and go to replace it only to find out it is no longer available from the manufacturer. This has happened to me enough times that now I purchase several when I find a tool I really like. I am retired and only work on my own stuff or help friends with their projects.
 

moorett

Active member
Joined
Jun 12, 2016
Messages
33
Location
Texas
I have a problem with laying down stuff and forgetting where I last put it. I have lots of spares of everything so I can keep on working even if I misplace a tool. I also hate it when I lose a tool and go to replace it only to find out it is no longer available from the manufacturer. This has happened to me enough times that now I purchase several when I find a tool I really like. I am retired and only work on my own stuff or help friends with their projects.
Love it ricleh. I know what you mean and tend to do the same.
 

ricleh

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 2, 2007
Messages
1,447
Location
Sacramento, CA
what Is the difference between the blue handled pic and the red handled pics?
The blue handled picks are the standard ones from PB Swiss. The handles are hard plastic. The red handled picks are custom made for DRPD and feature the SwissGrip soft handles. I personally prefer the red ones.
 

tamaraw

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 6, 2022
Messages
842
Got my first PB Swiss purchase from DRPD a while ago, and man is this stubby bit driver nice.

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Here it is sporting a Vessel +2 bit and lined up with a few other stubbies (serv-a-lite is reversible, the others are fixed). I really like my megadora stubbies but the PB Swiss handle is quite nice as well.

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My favorite part, and where it really shines imho, is that it makes the absolute perfect mini ball grip when paired with a longer bit. Vessel GS162100 +2 bit attached, pictured alongside a full-size Vessel +2 ball driver. Great size for the smaller +2 JIS fasteners in automotive interiors and some electronics.
 
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Qualitytools

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Joined
Apr 30, 2014
Messages
2,850
Location
SOCAL
The blue handled picks are the standard ones from PB Swiss. The handles are hard plastic. The red handled picks are custom made for DRPD and feature the SwissGrip soft handles. I personally prefer the red ones.
Thanks for taking the time to reply 😊
 

The_Inspector

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 18, 2022
Messages
103
Location
The Netherlands
Two weeks ago I decided to order a PB Swiss bit holder and a coin screw. I liked the quality so much that I ordered some more. Good thing the screwdrivers were on sale (set of 10 for 60 EUR ~ 72 USD) It came in today and I must say the quality is really good, the metal finish is amazing and the grip is awesome. I think these are going to be my new favourite screwdrivers.

887F91D1-7E5C-4EDC-9386-018A63DAD858.jpeg
 

Ralphvw

New member
Joined
May 7, 2016
Messages
2
Location
Holland
Well, I didn't realize that there is a PB Swiss thread here. Got to post some vintage candy!

01.jpg 03.jpg
Restored.
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05.jpg
Dear mvcorse,
Some time ago you posted this, I was wondering if you could go through the steps of restoration getting these drivers and the CAB (Cellulose Acetate Butyrate) back in original transparant shiny state. Would love to do that on some classic's here although they have the straight grip, not this rounded which might be easier.
They are absolutely beautiful pieces of art! Thank you for sharing.
 

mvcorse

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Joined
Nov 30, 2021
Messages
89
Dear mvcorse,
Some time ago you posted this, I was wondering if you could go through the steps of restoration getting these drivers and the CAB (Cellulose Acetate Butyrate) back in original transparant shiny state. Would love to do that on some classic's here although they have the straight grip, not this rounded which might be easier.
They are absolutely beautiful pieces of art! Thank you for sharing.
I'm using sandpaper 800#, 1000#, 1200#, 1500# and 2000#, then a polish compound with grinder will bring it shiny again ;)
 

Ralphvw

New member
Joined
May 7, 2016
Messages
2
Location
Holland
I'm using sandpaper 800#, 1000#, 1200#, 1500# and 2000#, then a polish compound with grinder will bring it shiny again ;)
Thank you very much for sharing that secret! Very impressed with that finish and those grips. Have never seen this grip on drivers other than the PB Swiss larger awl's. I'll have a go on a classic grip, might be more difficult to get that result because of the indents, on the other hand the outsides of the driver will have most damage.

Finding older PB Baumann tools in reasonable condition is not easy even here in Europe. Your PB collection is quite impressive, as all others PB tools posts too. Thank you all for sharing a joy to see!
 

mvcorse

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2021
Messages
89
Thank you very much for sharing that secret! Very impressed with that finish and those grips. Have never seen this grip on drivers other than the PB Swiss larger awl's. I'll have a go on a classic grip, might be more difficult to get that result because of the indents, on the other hand the outsides of the driver will have most damage.

Finding older PB Baumann tools in reasonable condition is not easy even here in Europe. Your PB collection is quite impressive, as all others PB tools posts too. Thank you all for sharing a joy to see!
For indents, I would suggest applying resin to fill the holes.
Vintage PB Swiss tools are quite hard to find, I'll share more for sure ;)
 

The_Inspector

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Joined
Apr 18, 2022
Messages
103
Location
The Netherlands
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my biggest pb order to date. i need to make some kind of case for the bits. ideas?

looking forward to using the torque drivers. i got all 4.
PB Swiss has boxes, they are pretty cheap (in Europe) around €10 a box and it will fit 50 bits. I Got four of them and almost all the bits in the PB collection will fit. Will take some pics over the weekend.
 

silkman

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Joined
Feb 23, 2021
Messages
367
Location
Athens
1710466769125.png

my biggest pb order to date. i need to make some kind of case for the bits. ideas?

looking forward to using the torque drivers. i got all 4.
I am too after a torque screwdriver but their presence in Greece is non existent. Last year they were on sale about 70-80 eur in most German sites (but they wouldn't ship to Greece).

I'll also have the PB ratchet screwdriver :cool:

*pic from a PB sales stand from Jumbo store in Zurich last time I was there.

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SwissMetric

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Joined
Dec 28, 2024
Messages
186
Location
Switzerland
@silkman:
As Jumbo has been taken over by Coop, Coop Bau+Hobby stores are given up or renamed to Jumbo. Sadly this will further reduce the DIY choice in Switzerland. Migros Do-It did massively shrink as Migros teamed up with the German Obi chain, IMO an awfully bad decisions.
Brick and mortar shouldn't be surprised that online shopping has become so popular. On Temu you sometimes get exactly the same articles as in local stores for maybe 1/2 to 1/4 of the price or even less (never ordered there though).


Here most use PB screwdrivers since decades. Even the three large German DIY chains (Obi, Hornbach and Bauhaus) sell them here while they don't offer them in their German stores. Personally I dislike those German DIY store chains, it doesn't really meet Swiss expectations. We suffer a seriously limited choice due to a lack of competition.

The classic PB with translucent smelly (pre-vanilla versions) acetate grips has been introduced many decades ago so an old collector screwdriver will look quite the same excepted the laser engraving.

Some German manufacturers already copied those classic PB handles in the 80's and even until recently Wera manufactured so-called VSM (here referring to the PB copy of the handles, not the VSM blade for slotted screw) series which looked exactly like the PB, including the green for the POZIDRIV. From some distance you can't tell the difference.

IMO PB should engrave unique serial numbers, the last time I checked it, it looked only like unique batch numbers. That was introduced a couple of years ago.

Some very common models like the classc VSM size 9 is no longer made IIRC.
Also PB manufactures some small sizes not listed in standards.
 

The_Inspector

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Joined
Apr 18, 2022
Messages
103
Location
The Netherlands
I also got a lot of Vessel bits and these are much longer. I purchased 2 organiser genie's and the work ok, downside is that the longer bits are a little wobbly. If you have a metal tool trolley these work great because of the (fairly strong) magnets, but my drawers are aluminium, so these don't work. Will probably end up pop-nailing them to the bottom.
 

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SwissMetric

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Dec 28, 2024
Messages
186
Location
Switzerland
Vintage PB Swiss tools are quite hard to find, I'll share more for sure ;)

Not really, here a few decades ago nearly all screwdrivers were PB's. Now the problem is that these were the classic ones with acetate handle which are still made so they're just old, not collector.
Get a random old toolbox and you'll typically end with some PB screwdrivers and wrenches marked "W. Germany" from various random manufacturers, many of which no longer existing.

There are also some common looking PB tools which are no longer manufactured, for example the PB 205.8 (8 mm Allen/INBUS). I'm not sure if they ever made a PB 205.10 (10 mm Allen/INBUS; Wera made one which looks exactly like the PB, both 8 mm and 10 mm).

BTW I was wrong, the PB 100.9-240 (classic VSM size 9) is still in the catalog, in this example 100 designates the series, 9 the size and 240 the blade length in mm (metallic part below the grip, not the overall length). Physical markings depend on the generation.


Personally I'd recommend following classic PB screwdrivers:

PB 100, sizes 00 to 9 (VSM blade, way better than the much more common ISO/DIN)
PB 106, sizes 1 to 5 (for screw terminals and slotted set screws)
PB 135, sizes 2 to 7 (stubby VSM)
PB 190 sizes 00 to 4 (Phillips)
PB 195 sizes 0 to 3 (stubby Phillips)
PB 192 sizes 0 to 4 (POZIDRIV, green handle)
PB 194 sizes 0 to 2 (stubby POZIDRIV, green handle)
PB 205 sizes 1.27 to 6 mm (Allen/INBUS), above 6 mm no longer available
PB 206 sizes 1.27 to 10 mm (Allen/INBUS, ball head)
PB 400 site T3 to T40 (TORX)
and if required:
PB 196 sizes 1 to 10 (for slotted nuts)

Longer versions or with hexagonal drive part below the grip can be useful but aren't an absolute must.

I don't know the new handle forms, I can live without.

The main drawback of the acetate handles is the extremely poor chemical resistance against many solvents. Even small amounts of some solvents can instantly damage these grips beyond repair. Also the smell from the pre-vanilla versions is not great (chemically like rotten butter).
 

Nobody-named-Olli

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Joined
Jan 9, 2025
Messages
1,579
Location
North Rhine-Westphalia; Germany
I really like PB Swiss’s demo(lition) drivers.

I had to convince a couple of ‘direct fasteners’ to give up and come out a concrete ceiling in a pretty awkward spot. Normally a few taps with a hammer get them out fairly easy, but not when you can’t reach them with the hammer only.

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And after a few strokes with a file, de-burred & ready for more.

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They really get their heat treatment right. Not to hard, not to soft. Other drivers would have suffered a lot more substantial damage after such ‘abuse’.

I definitely ‘love’ these.

Kind regards,
Olli
 

AJHD

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2020
Messages
3,014
Location
AZ
I really like PB Swiss’s demo(lition) drivers.

I had to convince a couple of ‘direct fasteners’ to give up and come out a concrete ceiling in a pretty awkward spot. Normally a few taps with a hammer get them out fairly easy, but not when you can’t reach them with the hammer only.

IMG_3955.jpeg

IMG_4273.jpeg

IMG_4274.jpeg

IMG_4275.jpeg

And after a few strokes with a file, de-burred & ready for more.

IMG_4276.jpeg

IMG_4278.jpeg

They really get their heat treatment right. Not to hard, not to soft. Other drivers would have suffered a lot more substantial damage after such ‘abuse’.

I definitely ‘love’ these.

Kind regards,
Olli

Finally. Someone who actually beats on a PB Swiss tool.

The "heavy duty" set is towards the top of list to buy.
 
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