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Visegrips any good?

barney rubble

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Mar 2, 2010
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282
I've got 5 new pairs hanging on the wall here by my desk. 3 are US made with the pin and 2 are riveted. The package is all that says made in America the tool it self does not have it on it anymore.
 
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bonneyman

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Apr 22, 2010
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Desert SW
A) The plant was in DeWitt, Nebraska . . . not Kansas
B) The owner is Newell Rubbermaid, not an individual. I'm sure someone got death threats, but shareholders (not individuals) have "owned" that company for awhile now.
C) It wasn't "sold" to a Chinese company, production was moved overseas. The brand is still owned by NWL, just produced overseas.

I'm all for bashing on companies that move american manufacturing jobs overseas, especially when it's my former employeer . . . but let's at least get the facts straight.

Hey, thanks for straigtening that out! I was just repeating what the tool supplier in Kansas City told me.
 

ksfarmboy

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Dec 3, 2009
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The Wheat State
The Peterson name on them went away in the mid 80s (I think:headscrat)

To further add to the confusion, I grabbed some 7WR/6LN combo sets from a local store last year that were stamped Peterson, Dewitt, NE. The packaging carried a copyright from 94 and 97, so either the tools were stamped that late, or stock carried over that long.
 

sk farmer

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Mar 4, 2009
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To further add to the confusion, I grabbed some 7WR/6LN combo sets from a local store last year that were stamped Peterson, Dewitt, NE. The packaging carried a copyright from 94 and 97, so either the tools were stamped that late, or stock carried over that long.

i don't think there is really any confusion. i just think scooterfish is off on his dating, no offense please. i believe the peterson company was sold shortly after your 97 time frame and that was stamped in all of them until that time.
 

matthew

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Dec 4, 2009
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1,346
I have a Vise Grip Toolbox (a multitool based on a 5WR), which was from around 2002, and it has Peterson stamped in it. I'd guess that it wasn't too much later that they started stamping them Irwin.
 
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cronic

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Jun 19, 2008
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Other than the units offered by snap on and napa, where can I purchase the full line of Grip-On products in the USA? I see that amazon has the nickel plated units, but I would like the epoxy coated units.
 
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Aberdale

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Mar 13, 2009
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Location
Ohio
I bought a couple Made-in-PRC Vice Grips from Lowe's last week. When I got them home I compared them to my older Peterson Vice Grips. The new ones have lots more side-to-side play in the lower jaws that the old ones, even though I've used the snot out of the old ones.

After looking at the newer ones for a while, I decided to tighten up the lower jaw by placing the body in a vice and squeezing them closer together. This technique worked pretty well on the first pair, but the second pair I squeezed a little too much and the mechanism stiffened up. Now I need to figure out how to spread the housing a little bit. I may have ruined them.

Dale
 

Lump

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Mar 16, 2009
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Jamestown, Ohio
Back in the day, I used to swear by Peterson brand Vice Grips, and I HATED other brands with the "other style release lever"...like Craftsman grips, for example. I once bought a Craftsman pair new, and gave myself blood blisters on 3 or 4 fingers several times before I got mad and literally threw them across the sheet metal shop where I worked. Later, a co-worker had picked them up, and asked if I really didn't want them any more. I said he could keep them, IF he promised to keep them out of my sight. I swore that if I ever saw them again, I would melt them with a torch! :mad:

The problem was that, while the release lever on Petersen Vice Grips springs to an "open" position when the grips are clamped tightly onto something, the "other style" release lever, like the old Craftsman units, snaps tightly against the moving lower handle. Thus, when you are really trying to put a tight bite onto something, the Craftsman style release lever will often snap shut on the skin of your smaller fingers. :shocking: Damn, I hated that!! So for the last 35 years or so I have always refused to buy any vice-grip-style locking pliers with a release lever which is longer than the lower moving handle, and which rests against that handle. This is true even when I wanted a cheapo clamp to weld onto something for a shadetree rig-job or something.

But now I see in the photos in this string that the Grip On locking pliers do seem have that same style longer release lever, resting against the moving handle. However, one post shows some call-out feature copy which mentions something like: "no more pinched fingers". My fingers were never pinched by Petersen grips...but do I correctly understand that the new Grip On design is different from those horrible old Craftsman vice grips? :confused:
 
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