Blunt nose for me. I've had way too many fails where I wasn't able to turn a nut or bolt because it was too close to a nearby surface and the long needle nose was in the way. Also if you try to turn something using just the tip it often doesn't have enough purchase. I can't think of a single instance, in my use, where a needle nose would have been capable of completing a task that a blunt nose was completely incapable of doing but many instances of the reverse.
You'll will not likely find a bigger fan of the Crunch than me. Try this with a Wave:My friend's porch umbrella had a broken arm. (Image removed from quote.)
Here's something I wouldn't have been able to tighten/loosen before with the MUT.
Not the pic I was looking for but close enough:https://forum.multitool.org/index.php/topic,50578.msg852500.html#msg852500
Yeah I'm going to BN my Surge but I wouldn't do it to any of my other MTs. Especially not the OHT as they are really good NN pliers.
What even Tosh's ?
Tossh is the OP, all the other following replies and posts -except one- are from members other than Tosh, and it's those I was referring to
Though I am often reaching for a pair of "lineys" for tasks the Multi can't do (ie - I need the blunt nose pliers, or better side cutters) I don't necessarily agree that the LM pliers are simply "not up to it"They've served relatively well in my experience, and I am not one to shy away from torque.Having said that - my Wave pliers are "shortened" due to snapping a tip and grinding down the other to match, and there is a lot of appeal in that too (although they are obviously still a lot narrower than linesman pliers, due to the OHO blades that dominate the Wave frame) It is plausibly in LMs interest to offer a "stubby" plier option....but since I can't seem to convince them to go back to the old cutting blades, I'm not sure that idea will get anywhere until or unless they have it for themselves.
It was just a few mm, but it makes a remarkable difference in use, feels significantly more "solid"here it is in comparison to normal wave (these tools are c 2006ish, so relevance to current plier heads in the range might be limited)
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