Diezelle, I liked the video a lot, pulling the nails was a nice touch. The Knipex has many nice advantages over the traditional slip joint pliers. One of the big usages of the traditional slip joint pliers was wasting wire. The old tick was to keep old wire coat hangers in the car and if something like your exhaust came loss you could use the wire and plier to wire it back-up (by the way that was just about the only thing the traditional plier wire cutter was good for). Yes, I like the plier a lot and will put them on my Christmas list.
Le couteau Opinel N°9 Bricolage est intéressant et pas cher : ruclips.net/video/elEDdQ3k834/видео.html Plus complet, la pince KNIPEX : ruclips.net/video/A8A1SPHQZgg/видео.html Ce que je préfère : ruclips.net/video/IDp0F5GNej0/видео.html
Why is this a must-have? I don't understand the appeal of slip-joint pliers. I know they are mostly popular in the US but they lack the leverage and range of a tongue -and-groove plier (Cobras) and they miss the cutting ability of a combination plier.
I have many tools. One time, I have encountered a screw into wall, sticked out a little. It was freely spinning but not getting any more loose. Turning it with screwdriver didn't make it come out. I tried prybars as well, but I couldn't get the right angle, screw was in a hard angled place. I tried my pliers as well but none was able to pull it, I didn't try very hard either because the pliers weren't exactly holding on to it due to screw's round shape. It shouldn't have been this hard. The screw needed to rotate, while being pulled. I was finally able to figure out, clamping on it with a drill chuck and use the drill while pulling it, that worked and the screw was finally out. Then I understood the use case of these "screw extractors" because they didn't make sense before. These screw extractors have better grip on small round objects compared to flat tip pliers and that give you the ability to turn or pull the screw with much more strength and lesser risk of damaging the tool.
They were developed on request of Knipex USA, because in the US slipjoint pliers are very common and Knipex didn’t have them in their product portfolio. But Knipex wouldn’t be Knipex if they just built them only better than the other brands. So they came out with this design. That’s why the first batch went to the US before they became available in Europe. Officially they were rolled out since mid-September in Germany. Some dealers had them earlier. If you can wait some weeks, you’ll get them everywhere. TBS got them pretty cheap, should be ready for delivery mid to end October.
Diezelle, I liked the video a lot, pulling the nails was a nice touch. The Knipex has many nice advantages over the traditional slip joint pliers. One of the big usages of the traditional slip joint pliers was wasting wire. The old tick was to keep old wire coat hangers in the car and if something like your exhaust came loss you could use the wire and plier to wire it back-up (by the way that was just about the only thing the traditional plier wire cutter was good for). Yes, I like the plier a lot and will put them on my Christmas list.
Amazing my friend! Great review! Best Regards!
thx ! :)
The Engineers seemed to do a much better job from the front on the smaller pan head screws
Es ce que tu aurais s'il-te-plaît un couteau d'électricien a me conseiller ?
Le couteau Opinel N°9 Bricolage est intéressant et pas cher : ruclips.net/video/elEDdQ3k834/видео.html
Plus complet, la pince KNIPEX : ruclips.net/video/A8A1SPHQZgg/видео.html
Ce que je préfère : ruclips.net/video/IDp0F5GNej0/видео.html
Merci tu gères grave merci
Je vais acheter l'opinel et le ciseaux
Why is this a must-have? I don't understand the appeal of slip-joint pliers. I know they are mostly popular in the US but they lack the leverage and range of a tongue -and-groove plier (Cobras) and they miss the cutting ability of a combination plier.
I have many tools. One time, I have encountered a screw into wall, sticked out a little. It was freely spinning but not getting any more loose. Turning it with screwdriver didn't make it come out. I tried prybars as well, but I couldn't get the right angle, screw was in a hard angled place. I tried my pliers as well but none was able to pull it, I didn't try very hard either because the pliers weren't exactly holding on to it due to screw's round shape. It shouldn't have been this hard. The screw needed to rotate, while being pulled. I was finally able to figure out, clamping on it with a drill chuck and use the drill while pulling it, that worked and the screw was finally out.
Then I understood the use case of these "screw extractors" because they didn't make sense before. These screw extractors have better grip on small round objects compared to flat tip pliers and that give you the ability to turn or pull the screw with much more strength and lesser risk of damaging the tool.
Good tools👍
🖐🙂🛠👌👍👍👍
💪☺👍
where did you buy these? ....I have been looking all over like an absolute dumbass for one of these.
They were developed on request of Knipex USA, because in the US slipjoint pliers are very common and Knipex didn’t have them in their product portfolio. But Knipex wouldn’t be Knipex if they just built them only better than the other brands. So they came out with this design. That’s why the first batch went to the US before they became available in Europe. Officially they were rolled out since mid-September in Germany. Some dealers had them earlier. If you can wait some weeks, you’ll get them everywhere. TBS got them pretty cheap, should be ready for delivery mid to end October.
@@muxmurki1497 Okay, thank you for clarifying that.
🤪👉excellent