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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish
make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
#2
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On Wednesday, April 13, 2016 at 12:09:53 PM UTC+1, David wrote:
I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box Lindstrom , now actually owned by Snap On, ball bearing steel, really don`t get better , from about 20 quid on ebay. |
#3
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In article ,
David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] To the best of my knowledge, Lindstrom are still the make to go for. Although I have also got RS own brand which are close. May well have been made by them. But both refer to some years ago. I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Impossible to do so without using them for some time. Mine have survived heavy use and are still as good as new. I bought a set from Lidl (red and yellow handles) - small cutters, snipe nose pliers and ordinary. Good enough for most things and cheap enough to lose. ;-) It seems easier to get decent electrician's size side cutters at a good price than the smaller ones. Economy of scale, I suppose. My favourites are an ancient set of CK ones. -- *How about "never"? Is "never" good for you? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#4
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 04:54:30 -0700, Adam Aglionby wrote:
On Wednesday, April 13, 2016 at 12:09:53 PM UTC+1, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box Lindstrom , now actually owned by Snap On, ball bearing steel, really don`t get better , from about 20 quid on ebay. Thanks to reponders. After I posted (having looked at Amazon and the like and seen the Lindstrom at £50ish) I found a set on eBay around £20. Think I will go for them. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
#5
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 13:50:12 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] To the best of my knowledge, Lindstrom are still the make to go for. Although I have also got RS own brand which are close. May well have been made by them. But both refer to some years ago. I have a Lindstrom pair for PCB work and they were worth the 40 quid I paid. But I don't use them for everyday 'rough' work. I bought a set from Lidl (red and yellow handles) - small cutters, snipe nose pliers and ordinary. Good enough for most things and cheap enough to lose. ;-) It seems easier to get decent electrician's size side cutters at a good price than the smaller ones. Economy of scale, I suppose. My favourites are an ancient set of CK ones. As it happens, I have a pair of 4 inch uninsulated cutters here on my desk. My favourite pair (just reclaimed from son's room after he 'borrowed' them). They are Elliott-Lucas, and are 50 years and 4 months old! |
#6
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On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote:
I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. Mike |
#7
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 14:32:04 +0100, Muddymike wrote:
On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. I don't know what's happened to them recently, but somewhere I have a couple of pairs of Maun side cutters with cantilevered handles. Silver handles, black blades. Superb, and seemingly indestructible. I bought them in 1971 in Canterbury market, and they were used, ex-BT stock! |
#8
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On 4/13/2016 2:07 PM, David wrote:
On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 04:54:30 -0700, Adam Aglionby wrote: On Wednesday, April 13, 2016 at 12:09:53 PM UTC+1, David wrote: Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box Lindstrom , now actually owned by Snap On, ball bearing steel, really don`t get better , from about 20 quid on ebay. Thanks to reponders. After I posted (having looked at Amazon and the like and seen the Lindstrom at £50ish) I found a set on eBay around £20. Think I will go for them. Cheers Dave R Do we think these might be fakes? http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Original-8...sAAOxy-W9STWZL |
#9
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On 4/13/2016 2:38 PM, Bob Eager wrote:
On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 14:32:04 +0100, Muddymike wrote: On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. I don't know what's happened to them recently, but somewhere I have a couple of pairs of Maun side cutters with cantilevered handles. Silver handles, black blades. Superb, and seemingly indestructible. I bought them in 1971 in Canterbury market, and they were used, ex-BT stock! My best tiny pointed pliers came from Epsom market in the early 60's, they are ex-WD and have the little "arrow" logo on them. Proper "through" hinge, not the usual overlay type. Not sure when they discontinued the logo. |
#10
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In article ,
Bob Eager wrote: I have a Lindstrom pair for PCB work and they were worth the 40 quid I paid. But I don't use them for everyday 'rough' work. Decent tools should survive hard work? -- *Why do we say something is out of whack? What is a whack? * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#11
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![]() "newshound" wrote in message o.uk... On 4/13/2016 2:38 PM, Bob Eager wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 14:32:04 +0100, Muddymike wrote: On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. I don't know what's happened to them recently, but somewhere I have a couple of pairs of Maun side cutters with cantilevered handles. Silver handles, black blades. Superb, and seemingly indestructible. I bought them in 1971 in Canterbury market, and they were used, ex-BT stock! My best tiny pointed pliers came from Epsom market in the early 60's, they are ex-WD and have the little "arrow" logo on them. Proper "through" hinge, not the usual overlay type. Not sure when they discontinued the logo. As I remember, back in the 70's, most Lindstroms had box joints. Good stuff. |
#12
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In article ,
newshound wrote: Do we think these might be fakes? http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Original-8...sAAOxy-W9STWZL From Hong Kong? Never. ;-) -- *Black holes are where God divided by zero * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#13
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In message , Bob Eager
writes As it happens, I have a pair of 4 inch uninsulated cutters here on my desk. My favourite pair (just reclaimed from son's room after he 'borrowed' them). They are Elliott-Lucas, and are 50 years and 4 months old! I still use the 1" micrometer I was required to purchase as an apprentice 55 years and 5 months ago. We had to make things like calipers, punches and tap wrenches:-) -- Tim Lamb |
#14
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David wrote:
I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Anyone I knew who had Lindstrom cutters always considered them to be "DON'T ASK TO BORROW THEM" tools, presumably from people using them to cut nails with. I can't justify the price, but have some of these, can't remember which model, but nicely made. http://www.piergiacomi.com/piergiacomi/en/products/hand-tools/285-taglio-raso-dettaglio.html |
#15
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 18:00:47 +0100, Andy Burns wrote:
David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Anyone I knew who had Lindstrom cutters always considered them to be "DON'T ASK TO BORROW THEM" tools, presumably from people using them to cut nails with. That is true for mine! |
#16
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 16:09:10 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Bob Eager wrote: I have a Lindstrom pair for PCB work and they were worth the 40 quid I paid. But I don't use them for everyday 'rough' work. Decent tools should survive hard work? True, but (a) I have other pairs (b) the jaws are quite small. |
#17
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![]() "Tim Lamb" wrote in message ... In message , Bob Eager writes As it happens, I have a pair of 4 inch uninsulated cutters here on my desk. My favourite pair (just reclaimed from son's room after he 'borrowed' them). They are Elliott-Lucas, and are 50 years and 4 months old! I still use the 1" micrometer I was required to purchase as an apprentice 55 years and 5 months ago. We had to make things like calipers, punches and tap wrenches:-) Wot, no nut crackers? ![]() |
#18
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On 13/04/2016 16:09, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Bob Eager wrote: I have a Lindstrom pair for PCB work and they were worth the 40 quid I paid. But I don't use them for everyday 'rough' work. Decent tools should survive hard work? I still use a few tools that my dad was given by retirees when he was an apprentice in 1936. Bill |
#19
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In message . com, bm
writes "Tim Lamb" wrote in message .. . In message , Bob Eager writes As it happens, I have a pair of 4 inch uninsulated cutters here on my desk. My favourite pair (just reclaimed from son's room after he 'borrowed' them). They are Elliott-Lucas, and are 50 years and 4 months old! I still use the 1" micrometer I was required to purchase as an apprentice 55 years and 5 months ago. We had to make things like calipers, punches and tap wrenches:-) Wot, no nut crackers? ![]() Well. There was the inevitable smooth bore pistol once we had unfettered access to a lathe. Mind, leaning on the cross slide took another 20 thou off the cut! -- Tim Lamb |
#20
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On 4/13/2016 4:45 PM, bm wrote:
"newshound" wrote in message o.uk... On 4/13/2016 2:38 PM, Bob Eager wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 14:32:04 +0100, Muddymike wrote: On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. I don't know what's happened to them recently, but somewhere I have a couple of pairs of Maun side cutters with cantilevered handles. Silver handles, black blades. Superb, and seemingly indestructible. I bought them in 1971 in Canterbury market, and they were used, ex-BT stock! My best tiny pointed pliers came from Epsom market in the early 60's, they are ex-WD and have the little "arrow" logo on them. Proper "through" hinge, not the usual overlay type. Not sure when they discontinued the logo. As I remember, back in the 70's, most Lindstroms had box joints. Good stuff. Thanks, I couldn't remember the proper term. I was pondering the other day how they actually made them. Presumably they forge and then machine the jaw which goes through the hinge after it has been passed through the space but before final rivetting. I'd post a picture, but it's not in its normal storage place at the moment. |
#21
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On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote:
I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). I note that on Amazon, for example, several items are listed as Bahco Lindstrom - with some just Bahco and others just Lindstrom. I imagine they are one company - but are they the same products or two or three different quality ranges? -- Rod |
#22
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![]() "newshound" wrote in message news ![]() On 4/13/2016 4:45 PM, bm wrote: "newshound" wrote in message o.uk... On 4/13/2016 2:38 PM, Bob Eager wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 14:32:04 +0100, Muddymike wrote: On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. I don't know what's happened to them recently, but somewhere I have a couple of pairs of Maun side cutters with cantilevered handles. Silver handles, black blades. Superb, and seemingly indestructible. I bought them in 1971 in Canterbury market, and they were used, ex-BT stock! My best tiny pointed pliers came from Epsom market in the early 60's, they are ex-WD and have the little "arrow" logo on them. Proper "through" hinge, not the usual overlay type. Not sure when they discontinued the logo. As I remember, back in the 70's, most Lindstroms had box joints. Good stuff. Thanks, I couldn't remember the proper term. I was pondering the other day how they actually made them. Presumably they forge and then machine the jaw which goes through the hinge after it has been passed through the space but before final rivetting. I'd post a picture, but it's not in its normal storage place at the moment. Looking at this - http://www.lonniesinc.com/images/Too...strom_7890.jpg I begin to wonder how the devil they're made. |
#23
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bm wrote:
Looking at this - http://www.lonniesinc.com/images/Too...strom_7890.jpg I begin to wonder how the devil they're made. Assuming you're using an LCD screen, if you look at such an angle that the contrast is about to reverse, you can see the rivet through the halves that's been ground flat ... |
#24
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 18:00:47 +0100, Andy Burns wrote:
David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Anyone I knew who had Lindstrom cutters always considered them to be "DON'T ASK TO BORROW THEM" tools, presumably from people using them to cut nails with. I can't justify the price, but have some of these, can't remember which model, but nicely made. http://www.piergiacomi.com/piergiacomi/en/products/hand-tools/285-taglio-raso-dettaglio.html They are lovely - I've a pair v. similarly coloured to those but, unfortunately, not the same make. I've used flush side-cutters for over 40 years now. Plessey used them on military contracts, so the slightest damage meant scrapping off, so we didn't want to waste them ;-) I've one 'big' pair - can cut 2.5 cable - and the rest are small. I always remove the spring and the cut-off retaining clip to get better 'feel'. This means that I have to be wary of the 'ping****it' potential of the offcut. They're good for cable ties, avoiding the sharp, sloping end that is commonly left. A contractor at work had a scar on the inside of his forearm from wrist to elbow from a badly cut tie. I've had/known of several incidents of a blade snapping, sometimes when not overloaded for the size of cutter - that can be nasty. I always put a finger over the side near me now. Also go through cable one conductor at a time. I looked at bigger ones but the cost...! -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#25
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in 1476147 20160413 142303 Bob Eager wrote:
On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 13:50:12 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] To the best of my knowledge, Lindstrom are still the make to go for. Although I have also got RS own brand which are close. May well have been made by them. But both refer to some years ago. I have a Lindstrom pair for PCB work and they were worth the 40 quid I paid. But I don't use them for everyday 'rough' work. I bought a set from Lidl (red and yellow handles) - small cutters, snipe nose pliers and ordinary. Good enough for most things and cheap enough to lose. ;-) It seems easier to get decent electrician's size side cutters at a good price than the smaller ones. Economy of scale, I suppose. My favourites are an ancient set of CK ones. As it happens, I have a pair of 4 inch uninsulated cutters here on my desk. My favourite pair (just reclaimed from son's room after he 'borrowed' them). They are Elliott-Lucas, and are 50 years and 4 months old! Your christening present? ;-) |
#26
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 20:24:05 +0100, Bill Wright wrote:
On 13/04/2016 16:09, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Bob Eager wrote: I have a Lindstrom pair for PCB work and they were worth the 40 quid I paid. But I don't use them for everyday 'rough' work. Decent tools should survive hard work? I still use a few tools that my dad was given by retirees when he was an apprentice in 1936. Bill I've a few files that friend's father had soon after he became an apprentice, so about 1920. They were cheap imports from a long-gone manufacturing third-world country: Sheffield. -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#27
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![]() "Andy Burns" wrote in message ... bm wrote: Looking at this - http://www.lonniesinc.com/images/Too...strom_7890.jpg I begin to wonder how the devil they're made. Assuming you're using an LCD screen, if you look at such an angle that the contrast is about to reverse, you can see the rivet through the halves that's been ground flat ... I mean how do they assemble the 2 pieces before riveting. |
#28
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On 14/04/2016 08:57, bm wrote:
"Andy Burns" wrote in message ... bm wrote: Looking at this - http://www.lonniesinc.com/images/Too...strom_7890.jpg I begin to wonder how the devil they're made. Assuming you're using an LCD screen, if you look at such an angle that the contrast is about to reverse, you can see the rivet through the halves that's been ground flat ... I mean how do they assemble the 2 pieces before riveting. My guess is that the 'top' handle is put on to the 'bottom' jaw after joint assembly. Cheers -- Syd |
#29
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![]() "Syd Rumpo" wrote in message ... On 14/04/2016 08:57, bm wrote: "Andy Burns" wrote in message ... bm wrote: Looking at this - http://www.lonniesinc.com/images/Too...strom_7890.jpg I begin to wonder how the devil they're made. Assuming you're using an LCD screen, if you look at such an angle that the contrast is about to reverse, you can see the rivet through the halves that's been ground flat ... I mean how do they assemble the 2 pieces before riveting. My guess is that the 'top' handle is put on to the 'bottom' jaw after joint assembly. Yes i'd buy that but my faith in welds is pretty poor, especially considering how much pressure you can exert on the handles, but i'm no metallurgist ![]() |
#30
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On Thu, 14 Apr 2016 07:51:40 +0000, Bob Martin wrote:
in 1476147 20160413 142303 Bob Eager wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 13:50:12 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] To the best of my knowledge, Lindstrom are still the make to go for. Although I have also got RS own brand which are close. May well have been made by them. But both refer to some years ago. I have a Lindstrom pair for PCB work and they were worth the 40 quid I paid. But I don't use them for everyday 'rough' work. I bought a set from Lidl (red and yellow handles) - small cutters, snipe nose pliers and ordinary. Good enough for most things and cheap enough to lose. ;-) It seems easier to get decent electrician's size side cutters at a good price than the smaller ones. Economy of scale, I suppose. My favourites are an ancient set of CK ones. As it happens, I have a pair of 4 inch uninsulated cutters here on my desk. My favourite pair (just reclaimed from son's room after he 'borrowed' them). They are Elliott-Lucas, and are 50 years and 4 months old! Your christening present? ;-) I wish. 15th birthday! |
#31
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On 14/04/2016 09:17, Syd Rumpo wrote:
On 14/04/2016 08:57, bm wrote: "Andy Burns" wrote in message ... bm wrote: Looking at this - http://www.lonniesinc.com/images/Too...strom_7890.jpg I begin to wonder how the devil they're made. Assuming you're using an LCD screen, if you look at such an angle that the contrast is about to reverse, you can see the rivet through the halves that's been ground flat ... I mean how do they assemble the 2 pieces before riveting. My guess is that the 'top' handle is put on to the 'bottom' jaw after joint assembly. Is the handle on the lower half solid? Doesn't need to be for strength, and if not, could slide the other bit down a gap. |
#32
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 4/14/2016 9:17 AM, Syd Rumpo wrote:
On 14/04/2016 08:57, bm wrote: "Andy Burns" wrote in message ... bm wrote: Looking at this - http://www.lonniesinc.com/images/Too...strom_7890.jpg I begin to wonder how the devil they're made. Assuming you're using an LCD screen, if you look at such an angle that the contrast is about to reverse, you can see the rivet through the halves that's been ground flat ... I mean how do they assemble the 2 pieces before riveting. My guess is that the 'top' handle is put on to the 'bottom' jaw after joint assembly. Cheers Mine is similar in overall design, but there is certainly no sign that the handle was ever separate from the "inner" jaw. I assume that the jaw was passed through the slot when it was a rectangular section which just fitted, then it was hot forged to make the jaw and finally machined before the hinge section was located and rivetted. |
#33
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 13:07:31 +0000, David wrote:
On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 04:54:30 -0700, Adam Aglionby wrote: On Wednesday, April 13, 2016 at 12:09:53 PM UTC+1, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box Lindstrom , now actually owned by Snap On, ball bearing steel, really don`t get better , from about 20 quid on ebay. Thanks to reponders. After I posted (having looked at Amazon and the like and seen the Lindstrom at £50ish) I found a set on eBay around £20. Think I will go for them. Turned up today and they certainly look like the real thing. The hinge has changed from my ancient ones, but they do look like the ones on the web site at http://www.lindstromtools.com. I have a pair of 7190 snips. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
#34
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Wednesday, 13 April 2016 14:38:57 UTC+1, Bob Eager wrote:
On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 14:32:04 +0100, Muddymike wrote: On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. I don't know what's happened to them recently, but somewhere I have a couple of pairs of Maun side cutters with cantilevered handles. Silver handles, black blades. Superb, and seemingly indestructible. I bought them in 1971 in Canterbury market, and they were used, ex-BT stock! I have these,same era, handed down from my grandfather. SUPERB |
#35
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 08:33:48 -0800, mcowsill wrote:
On Wednesday, 13 April 2016 14:38:57 UTC+1, Bob Eager wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2016 14:32:04 +0100, Muddymike wrote: On 13/04/2016 12:09, David wrote: I used to have a really useful set of very small wire snips - a Swedish make (Lindtrom). Good for getting into tight spaces for cutting thin wires. [Note: just found a small pair of needle nosed pliers and managed to look up the maker. Then Googled. Mainly US hits, but £plenty!] I now look at those available on line and I can't tell the difference between good quality precision engineered and cheap ones from crap steel. Something like http://www.amazon.co.uk/PRECISION-MI...ERS-nipper/dp/ B00439KLYE/ref=zg_bs_1938883031_11 perhaps. Any recommendations? I'd rather spend more on a good pair than keep replacing cheap ones. Cheers Dave R I know what you mean. I have a pair of Linstrom side cutters that were given to me. They must be 50 years old yet still perfect. Only downside is they do not have insulated handles. I don't know what's happened to them recently, but somewhere I have a couple of pairs of Maun side cutters with cantilevered handles. Silver handles, black blades. Superb, and seemingly indestructible. I bought them in 1971 in Canterbury market, and they were used, ex-BT stock! I have these,same era, handed down from my grandfather. SUPERB I just managed to buy a new pair of Maun cutters from the shop where I bought my first tools 51 years ago. Still going strong in Brighton, now run by 5th generation of the family (started around 1910). -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
#36
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Thu, 31 Jan 2019 15:52:16 +0000, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Brian Gaff wrote: Lindstrom ones I have have plastic sleaved handles with little springs pushed in the ends to keep the jaws apart, a device I find intensely irritating! Brian Yes- when the plastic sleeves wear with use, the spring strips slip out of mesh. IIRC (long time ago) the issue was something to do with the springs. Cheers Dave R -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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