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Show your pipe wrenches

Exceller8

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 19, 2012
Messages
2,337
Location
Banning, CA
I picked up this 18" Rigid aluminum pipe wrench for $25. Probably paid a little too much but I really like it. Only problem is now I want more of them!! :lol:
 

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Outlawmws

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Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,124
Location
The Badlands
I picked up this 18" Rigid aluminum pipe wrench for $25. Probably paid a little too much but I really like it. Only problem is now I want more of them!! :lol:

:thumbup: I have an 18# Toledo in forged Aluminum. I'l be really happy to have it on the next piping job which is likely to be air lines in my garage...
 

McFarmer

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2009
Messages
2,139
36 inch Trimont I got in return for helping clean out father-in-law's shed. Nobody knew it was there, teeth in very good shape.

image_zps04aa1d27.jpg
 

rshadd

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2009
Messages
1,598
Location
Doylestown, PA
Found this little guy mixed in with my Grandfathers tool box. It's a 6 incher made by the Erie Tool Works (Erie, PA)

10428998606_85a73b7917_z.jpg


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10429029566_6617a56e6d_z.jpg
 
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toolmaniac

Active member
Joined
Dec 23, 2013
Messages
29
Location
Thessaloniki, Greece
I got a few, mainly German made, but my pride and joy is a vintage 15 inch, TRIMO, made in the US (it looks to be almost identical, as far as the vintage, to the one LOWENDRIDER shows above).
 

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rodm1

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 17, 2008
Messages
2,270
So I told a friend of mine who uses pipe wrenches quite often (plumbing usually) but was really excited to hear that there are pipe wrenches that are 6" inches. However, my friend wanted to know if there is any companies that still make 6" pipe wrenches in USA anymore and if they do what brands are they and where you buy them.

Called Grainger, Fastenal and even MSC industries, but no luck at all. Any help would be exceptionally awesome and I knowing I am asking a great deal, but anyone has any pictures of a pipe wrench that 6" that would be helpful as well. Thanks.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0009GF3YS/?tag=atomicindus08-20

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0009W77IM/?tag=atomicindus08-20
 

HTGTS350

Banned
Joined
Mar 2, 2010
Messages
603
Pipe wrench drawer, from 4" to 18" a mixture of Snap On, Rigid and HIT. The 18", 24", 36" and 48" don't fit in the drawer and the 60" lives under the bench.
 

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zkling

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Joined
Jan 23, 2007
Messages
16,939
I got a few, mainly German made, but my pride and joy is a vintage 15 inch, TRIMO, made in the US (it looks to be almost identical, as far as the vintage, to the one LOWENDRIDER shows above).

I keep seeing those locking pipe wrenches, they seem more common in Europe than the states. Is there a reason for that? I image they could come in handy like a large set of vise grips. :dunno:
 

Zeke

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Joined
Aug 13, 2009
Messages
17,176
Location
Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Shoot, I'd have to got to 3 different tool boxes to line them up nice and take a pic. Let't just say that I consider them handy enough to have them handy. Need to get the offset ones though.
 
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littletoes

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2010
Messages
1,244
Location
NE Washington
I only use an offset if I have too!

After years of pulling on wrenches, I'm so programmed that I prefer the standard ones...but just last friday, I handed an offset 14 to a guy that needed it, and was thankful that I had it.
 

Jbullfrog

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 9, 2007
Messages
2,347
Location
Avoca, Iowa
Here are a few of my pipe wrenches and the storage rack I made with my press and brake. I have Ridgid from 4"- 48" standard and offset from 6 - 36". The rack is a section of hog panel that I formed and stapled to the wall. I have my offsets hanging from pegs that are the scrap hog panel wire (1/4").
 

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BullfrogJohnson

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2012
Messages
111
Location
Charlotte, NC
If any of you guys that have a surplus of big chain tongs feel like selling one let me know. I need a heavy duty one that can hook my service truck crane to while repacking big hydraulic cylinders.
 

Gmonkee

Well-known member
Joined
May 9, 2010
Messages
2,724
My lame collection, I'm a part time plumber, full time home handiman.

The 8" Olympia and the 10" Mexican Proto are by far the stars of the lot. A robust tool just gives the feeling that you won't get hurt using it.
Of interest would be the Gedore stilson type made in Brasil, 60's vintage.

The rest are Asain imports, with that red 8" from Spain like another showed here. Some are clearly light duty while others are as heavy duty as I could afford. They all have a place on the job.
 

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OP
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jeffmoss26

Well-known member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
12,851
Location
Cleveland, Ohio
Those look good. I painted several of mine Chevy Engine Orange which is the color Ridgid told me to use, since they do not sell touchup paint.
 

EOC_Jason

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 25, 2012
Messages
11,388
Location
Bentonville, AR
If any of you guys that have a surplus of big chain tongs feel like selling one let me know. I need a heavy duty one that can hook my service truck crane to while repacking big hydraulic cylinders.

Should of asked 6 months ago...
 

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rockinacummins

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Joined
Oct 27, 2013
Messages
1,706
Location
Wapanucka, OK
Here are a few of mine. All my Rigids anyway. I have a few old vintage USA made ones somewhere else. I'm partial to the Rigids. I'm extremely partial to the offset type Rigids. Only have two 45's now but I hope to one day have a complete set of straights, 45's, and 90's.

A straight 18, a 45 offset 14, and a 45 offset 10.



And here's the daddy. 60" next to two 36's. Thing weighs probably close to 50 pounds!

 

beatcad

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2013
Messages
4,520
Location
NOVA
heres what I got.
from the top down.
craft 14"
proto 14" (I restored)
trimo 10"
ridgid 6"
ridgid 24"
ridgid 18"
IMG_3877_zps310eae88.jpg

IMG_3878_zps598de693.jpg
 

the gypsy

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 13, 2013
Messages
1,780
Location
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Hi guys a question for you experts. Why don't we see more of those pipe wrenches that are offset at 90 degrees? They saved my *** one time when the drain pipe was real close to the walls in a corner. I could not get any of my pipe wrenches into that tight spot. Now remember this I was not a pro plumber but had to solve this problem, went to the store and discovered this 90 degree offset wrench. Let me tell you it made the work alot easier. A DRAMA queen would tell it saved her life, but let's not go there. So it surprises me that me doi not see many posted. DAH?
 

Exeter

Well-known member
Joined
May 12, 2014
Messages
93
I'm pulling this thread up out of the deep with my latest restoration. Picked up an 18" Ridgid at a garage sale for $10.
Here's the only before pic that I snapped:
Ridgid_Pipe_Wrench-1.jpg


Here it is after bead blasting the handle, sanding the flats on the hook jaw, polishing up the nut and giving it some new paint. You could almost mistake it for a brand new one. But if you notice the logo, it has the overlapped D & G forming the diamond. I'm pretty sure it was made after 1955 based on the rounded bottom on the hook jaw. Does anyone know when they stopped using this logo and moved to the current logo? It would help in narrowing down it's birthdate.

Ridgid_Pipe_Wrench-3.jpg

Ridgid_Pipe_Wrench-2.jpg
 
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