PowerGenGuy
Well-known member
Can anyone speak on the quality of the Vice Grips that are being manufactured offshore against the older ones that were made in Nebraska?
I buy the old ones at the swap meet whenever I can find them..

Irwin *****
so whats the solution for good locking pliers? snapon, german tools? If some tool company reps out there are looking on this forum maybe you could swing ideas for them to step up to the plate to make some quality locking pliers. *cough*channellock*cough*
so whats the solution for good locking pliers? snapon, german tools? If some tool company reps out there are looking on this forum maybe you could swing ideas for them to step up to the plate to make some quality locking pliers. *cough*channellock*cough*
junk. hands down the quality went in the crapper. i have a newer pair and the jaws disentegrated on the first time trying to remove a broken stud. irwin in short order destoyed a very good product. irwin, if you are watching i will challenge any of your new imported pliers against my 25 or 30 old school originals. your new ones ****.........
I was not aware that the Vise-Grip had been outsourced until This Saturday when I picked up two pair of the "U" shape jawed welders grips. It was noticeably clear that one was cheaper and I was thinking some Chinese company was counterfeiting them.
Who knew the company itself was doing the counterfeiting?
Here are side by side pics, the older set was well used, but the difference is obvious:
so whats the solution for good locking pliers? snapon, german tools? If some tool company reps out there are looking on this forum maybe you could swing ideas for them to step up to the plate to make some quality locking pliers. *cough*channellock*cough*
I don't have any... yet... but:
![]()
http://shop.nws-tools.de/index.php/en/complete-assortment/grip-pliers.html

I was not aware that the Vise-Grip had been outsourced until This Saturday when I picked up two pair of the "U" shape jawed welders grips. It was noticeably clear that one was cheaper and I was thinking some Chinese company was counterfeiting them.
Who knew the company itself was doing the counterfeiting?
Here are side by side pics, the older set was well used, but the difference is obvious:
![]()

Both pair of your welding clamps appear to be USA made, There is no "Irwin" stamped on them like the newer ones do.
The newer ones also do not have the emblem on the one side that says "Peterson Mfg. Co. Dewitt, Nb."
One pair is newer going by the fact that the one has a pat. date and the other does not.
I don't have any... yet... but:
![]()
QUOTE]
This is just my PERSONAL opinion, but I very much dislike the style of this release-lever mechanism. Craftsman units used to be made this way.
Here is the difference: When you use lot of pressure to clamp a regular-style Vise Grip down tightly, the release lever springs out from the lower handle. But with this type unit (like the older Craftsman brand vise-grip clones), the release lever springs tightly against the lower handle. This makes it quite likely that the skin on your fingers will be pinched in between.Several times I got blood blisters on 3 fingers from a Craftsman "vise grip clone" that someone had bought as a gift for me.
After about the third time, I literally threw them across the shop at work, and never picked them up again.
If made in USA, then their quality slipped before they went offshore. The metal is rougher, the pressure handle just slightly less deep and therefor weaker, and most telling is the "Vise-Grip" stamping on the side is so blurry it is well nigh illegible. with the patent dates stripped off, everything about this tool screamed "knock off". Any company that cares so little about even presenting its name legibly, has lost it...