Used mine the other day to remove a rusted screw holding a toilet cistern to the wall. As per normal, the screw heads are highly corroded and a screwdriver can’t grip the head. The Knipex TwinGrip did it with ease as I’d anticipated, and was the exact task I had in mind when I purchased a set. A very versatile tool that should be in your EDC.
@ToolsandTime11 ай бұрын
Those are nice pliers. I'd love to see that same design on the tip and the same quality but merged with a vise grip function--that would be an interesting tool. Thanks for the discussion and showing those to us!
@happylittletools11 ай бұрын
They have those by a Japanese brand called "Engineer"! Here is a link to them: amzn.to/3OF6tQj
@methnen2 ай бұрын
@@happylittletools 3.peaks also Japanese makes a great version of these as well.
@fuloplehel11 ай бұрын
This is a great screw extraction tool, but not for pipes,the jaws are similar to the cobra pliers but the geometry is a little different. But one of most used tool in my bag, alongside with the pliers wrench. 👍👍👍
@jakearmstrong456310 ай бұрын
Flare adapter on your water heater, Or 3/8” Pipe/fittings. I grab em for 3/8 supply lines sometimes.
@ThomasEdward11 ай бұрын
I use mine for everything everyday fantastic tool
@allkindsofoutdooractivities11 ай бұрын
I love all my Knipex. Good quality review
@happylittletools11 ай бұрын
Thank you! I appreciate hearing that.
@TheReal195311 ай бұрын
Mostly, a good set of vise grip type pliers will do the same thing and offer you more choices like a Milwaukee set. This would be a good single tool that would work most of the time, but lots of slip because they don't lock. When you repeatedly slip, you remove material and scar. At some point, you may not have enough material to grip.
@happylittletools11 ай бұрын
I think what sets these apart from vise grips, is that these can be used in tighter places where a vice grip wouldn't be able to grab. Also being straight jaws instead of angled jaws allows reach in tighter places. I think these are great screw/bolt removal tools for medium duty work. Anything heavier duty, you'd probably want vice grips or ideally, some sort of extractor socket, or screw extractor impact bits. What sets these pliers up for being so helpful, is that they can do a lot of different tasks well enough, that often times, you won't need to reach for other tools. But I agree that a good set of vice grips is needed in any tool kit!
@BlaBlaBlaInDaHouse9 ай бұрын
Great video!
@jetjazz0511 ай бұрын
The serrations at the tip remind me of Vampliers, I'm curious to know who did this idea first, Knipex or "Vampire Tools" I believe is the company. I can't find much about Vampire Tools online, their site says they've been in business since 2011. I always wanted to dismiss the Vampliers as a gimmick, but considering Knipex uses a similar serrated design and the Vampliers are made in Japan they have to be at least decent... Sadly I don't think I own any Japanese tools. I wish I did... I've just always been a sucker for European tools if I could afford them. The styling, quality... it makes me smile. Since you are Canadian, I will say I bought an industrial borescope for $500 back in 2012 from a company in Winnipeg called Medit. Nice device, it can record video, take pictures, it came with a borescope and a handheld device to view the image on. China, Taiwan, India, they make ok tools, but it's always exciting to buy a tool from other countries.
@happylittletools11 ай бұрын
Okay so who did it first: Well between those two companies, I am not sure. But in general, the first instance of this kind of teeth I have seen on a tool is the Utica No. 1300-8. A very nice set of antique gas and burner pliers (alloy-artifacts.org/utica-tool.html#gas-burner). They have that 'screw removal' teeth feature. And they're from the 1920s ish? I have a really nice pair that I will eventually get around to reviewing. From what I've seen collecting tools, most of the cool new ideas and features we see today, are just taken from old patents. I want to get a borescope a lot. they are a great specialty tool, but one I have not needed yet for any project!
@jackkeoshian756011 ай бұрын
The Vampliers predate the Knipex Twin-Grips by quite a bit. Note that the Vampliers are merely a rebranded set of Engineer pliers, who manufacture and sell them in Japan. I own the engineer originals and they are excellent, top quality pliers. I also own the much more recently introduced Twin-Grips, which are also excellent. Both of those pliers are specifically designed to grip the barely exposed head of a screw and do a much better job of screw extraction than Vice Grips in almost every case.
@Healcraft11 ай бұрын
@@jackkeoshian7560 i have several different ENGINEER pliers and use them often, only occasionally will I want pliers without the screw "cutout" on the tip
@ste-c12187 ай бұрын
Knippex BEST pliers grippers knips Etc...Just the best no question
@wilhelmgerber212914 күн бұрын
Here's a banana for scale😂😂brilliant
@walley2637Ай бұрын
you aren't the first to mess up the screw extraction demo. everyone seems to make the same mistake. Don't try to do it on a small piece of wood that you need to stabilize with your other hand. do it on a piece screwed to the bench so you can use proper force.