YesIHaveAHammer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2025
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Have you always wondered why pliers come in the sizes they do? Looks like someone chose some nice looking inch numbers, and just spaced them a bit further apart as the sizes got bigger so we don't have too many sizes. That is a method, but turns out there's can be some math reasoning behind it too. I was using some of that math recently and wondered if it appeared in the design of tools - it does. I've pieced this together, so do let us know if you can add or correct anything.
The Renard number series divides a range (say 4" to 36") into some sensibly spaced out steps using (not square) roots of 10, with the gaps between them getting progressively larger. So if you're designing a range of tools/boxes/whatever, you can use this to choose which sizes to include. You choose a variant of the series depending on how many steps you want and how fast it should ramp up. The most basic series "R5" goes 1, 1.6, 2.5, 4, 6.3, 10 - each size 1.6x the previous. You multiply your smallest size by these, so say you want your range of 5 pliers to start at 4", the following sizes will be 6.4", 10" etc. That's ramping up excessively fast, so you'd actually want to use a shallower series like R10 which only goes up 1.25x on each step on the way from 1 to 10, and just use the first 5 numbers from it.
In 1988 this series was used in the definition of water pump plier specifications in ISO 8976-1988. Using the R10 series, the standard lengths were produced for a range starting at 100mm, making the rest of the range go 125mm, 160mm, 200mm, 250mm, 315mm, 400mm, 500mm. Eight sizes. The standard also gives a +/- small acceptable variation for each size. The standard was updated in 2004, and again in 2021. It's principally the same, only size variations are now formulated as approximately 0.9x to 1.12x of the nominal lengths.
As a plier manufacturer, you'll have other considerations for sizing such as typical applications, customer feedback, and offering sizes in memorable round numbers both in mm and inches. Maybe you think a 200mm model is not so necessary (as seems to be the case for Knipex with their Cobra/Alligator models), and you'd rather offer an extra inbetween size further down in the range. You can calculate an R series for any ramp up and number of steps you want, and in this case it looks like they used R8 which goes up 1.33x on each step - giving the sizes 100mm, 133mm, 178mm, 237mm, 316mm, 422mm, 562mm, 750mm etc. - thus losing the 200mm size and re-spacing its neighbours to cover the gap. We don't need to go more than 562mm, so for that inbetween size let's also look at R16 which goes up 1.15x on each step - at the bottom end this could offer us the extra sizes 115mm, (133mm appears here too), and 154mm. We can drop the 133mm and take both 115mm and 154mm instead, getting us back to eight sizes.
With a bit of rounding to nice numbers, we end up with a range of 100mm (~4"), 125mm (~5"), 150mm (~6"), 180mm (~7"), 250mm (~10"), 300mm (~12"), 400mm (~16"), and 560mm (~22").
So that seems to be why those sizes exist, why others don't, why it doesn't mirror pipe wrenches or adjustables, etc.
The Renard number series divides a range (say 4" to 36") into some sensibly spaced out steps using (not square) roots of 10, with the gaps between them getting progressively larger. So if you're designing a range of tools/boxes/whatever, you can use this to choose which sizes to include. You choose a variant of the series depending on how many steps you want and how fast it should ramp up. The most basic series "R5" goes 1, 1.6, 2.5, 4, 6.3, 10 - each size 1.6x the previous. You multiply your smallest size by these, so say you want your range of 5 pliers to start at 4", the following sizes will be 6.4", 10" etc. That's ramping up excessively fast, so you'd actually want to use a shallower series like R10 which only goes up 1.25x on each step on the way from 1 to 10, and just use the first 5 numbers from it.
In 1988 this series was used in the definition of water pump plier specifications in ISO 8976-1988. Using the R10 series, the standard lengths were produced for a range starting at 100mm, making the rest of the range go 125mm, 160mm, 200mm, 250mm, 315mm, 400mm, 500mm. Eight sizes. The standard also gives a +/- small acceptable variation for each size. The standard was updated in 2004, and again in 2021. It's principally the same, only size variations are now formulated as approximately 0.9x to 1.12x of the nominal lengths.
As a plier manufacturer, you'll have other considerations for sizing such as typical applications, customer feedback, and offering sizes in memorable round numbers both in mm and inches. Maybe you think a 200mm model is not so necessary (as seems to be the case for Knipex with their Cobra/Alligator models), and you'd rather offer an extra inbetween size further down in the range. You can calculate an R series for any ramp up and number of steps you want, and in this case it looks like they used R8 which goes up 1.33x on each step - giving the sizes 100mm, 133mm, 178mm, 237mm, 316mm, 422mm, 562mm, 750mm etc. - thus losing the 200mm size and re-spacing its neighbours to cover the gap. We don't need to go more than 562mm, so for that inbetween size let's also look at R16 which goes up 1.15x on each step - at the bottom end this could offer us the extra sizes 115mm, (133mm appears here too), and 154mm. We can drop the 133mm and take both 115mm and 154mm instead, getting us back to eight sizes.
With a bit of rounding to nice numbers, we end up with a range of 100mm (~4"), 125mm (~5"), 150mm (~6"), 180mm (~7"), 250mm (~10"), 300mm (~12"), 400mm (~16"), and 560mm (~22").
So that seems to be why those sizes exist, why others don't, why it doesn't mirror pipe wrenches or adjustables, etc.
| ISO 8976 (R10) | R8 | R8 + some R16 | Nice |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 (~4") |
| 125 | 133 | 115 | 125mm (~5") |
| - | - | 154 | 150mm (~6") |
| 160 | 178 | 178 | 180mm (~7") |
| 200 | 237 | 237 | 250mm (~10") |
| 250 | 316 | 316 | 300mm (~12") |
| 315 | 422 | 422 | 400mm (~16") |
| 400 | 562 | 562 | 560mm (~22") |
| 500 | 750 | - | - |
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