S

sparc

I replaced two pairs of wire cutters a couple of months ago and they're blunt already! One was a Knipex plier/stripping set, a second from NWS, so not cheap rubbish - about £80 the pair.

I've only used the cutters for 2.5mm cable at most - cutting and stripping, but the NWS now won't even cut a cable tie, and the Knipex won't strip insulation!

What's going on??

I consider my work load to be fairly average, so I can't see how I have worn them out in two months. It's got to be the quality of materials used.
 
What's going on you ask?

Back in the day, quality tools - and I mean QUALITY - were made in a little English town called Sheffield where they were canny hands at the art of steel making. and the tools were stamped with the words "Made in Sheffield - England"

Are those words stamped on the tools you buy today???

Somebody once told me that in Japan there is a town / city /collection of paper huts or what ever, that is named "Sheffield, England" so they can make cheap tools there and legitimately stamp them with those words.
 
Knipex are still German made I believe. Mine are still sharp as the day I got them a year ago. I would send them back under warranty, that's just not good enough. They used to offer lifetime warranty but not sure these days.
 
Were they Elliot Lucas by any chance? They were the best, Stanley wooden handled screwdrivers as well

Almost every kind of tool you can think of - and quality cutlery too - was made in Sheffield.

My original trade is a precision engineer, so for me it was engineering tools and Moore & Wright is a brand that sticks in my mind.

Here's link I just found and I'm almost weeping with despair. Moore & Wright - Moore and Wright

Part of the text reads: "Now part of the eminent Bowers Group and with production facilities in the UK and China, "

.... and there you have it - the total decline of our once fine industries and why we can now only buy crap tools.
 
Almost every kind of tool you can think of - and quality cutlery too - was made in Sheffield.

My original trade is a precision engineer, so for me it was engineering tools and Moore & Wright is a brand that sticks in my mind.

Here's link I just found and I'm almost weeping with despair. Moore & Wright - Moore and Wright

Part of the text reads: "Now part of the eminent Bowers Group and with production facilities in the UK and China, "

.... and there you have it - the total decline of our once fine industries and why we can now only buy crap tools.

Ive got a couple sheffield steel straight razors and there real nice and hold there sharpness really well.

Very good for 100 year old steel
 
I've got 'Made in Germany' stamped into the metal on a pair - but I've been told that could mean anything, such as they're attached to a bit of cardboard in Germany, but the working parts came from - Anywhere.

Globalisation - don'tcha love it? More and more cramp circling the world in containers. I'm old enough to still vaguely remember Japanese goods being considered inferior - so maybe there's hope for Chinese manufacturering yet.
 
Don't buy any hand tool that hasn't got a battery inside or a bit of wire with a plug on the end hanging out of it. :jester:

Seriously though, the cynic in me is thinking that pliers & side cutters etc. are like the current crop of Consumer Units & MCBS etc - No matter what brand they are, who's name is on them, they all come from the same factory in deepest China.
 
What's going on you ask?

Back in the day, quality tools - and I mean QUALITY - were made in a little English town called Sheffield where they were canny hands at the art of steel making. and the tools were stamped with the words "Made in Sheffield - England"

Are those words stamped on the tools you buy today???

Somebody once told me that in Japan there is a town / city /collection of paper huts or what ever, that is named "Sheffield, England" so they can make cheap tools there and legitimately stamp them with those words.
Apparently there's one in china called USA pronounced oohsar as well,for the same reasons
 
Moore and Wright micrometers,now there's a blast from the past,I bet most youngsters today couldn't even use one properly,let alone reset one,the last lad that had mine wanted to know "what the small knurled bit on the top does".
 
Moore and Wright micrometers,now there's a blast from the past,I bet most youngsters today couldn't even use one properly,let alone reset one,the last lad that had mine wanted to know "what the small knurled bit on the top does".

I think most young 'uns would think it was a G-clamp.
 
Best EV Chargers by Electrical2Go! The official electric vehicle charger supplier.

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

Advert

Daily, weekly or monthly email

Thread Information

Title
Hand tools - what not to buy!
Prefix
N/A
Forum
Electrical Tools and Products
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
21

Advert

Thread statistics

Created
sparc,
Last reply from
billyblade,
Replies
21
Views
6,178

Advert

TrueNAS JBOD Storage Server

Back
Top