Wenger's pliers are interesting. I haven't had a chance to extensively test them, but I believe they'd be perfectly adequate for up to medium-duty gripping tasks. I certainly wouldn't use them as a substitute for a wrench. And I'd use another tool for heavier work. Comparing them to Juice pliers is apples to oranges. They are different basic designs, and the Juice's pliers are non-adjustable and full-sized.The TL;DR version: while the Wenger-type SAK pliers have their limitations, they're worth trying out for light duty.
The big 'uns on the Rangers are great!
I'd say the Wenger and Victorinox pliers are pretty evenly matched, with the adjustability of the Wenger type giving them a slight advantage.
Those seem nice! Which model is that? I wish they made a Ranger with those pliers and a saw blade. Seems a shame not to take advantage of the length of that tool by adding a saw.
It does look like there were a few with saw and pliers on the wiki. Not sure how hard they'd be to hunt down on fleabay.
It's a Rangergrip Boatsman. It does look like there were a few with saw and pliers on the wiki. Not sure how hard they'd be to hunt down on fleabay.
It’s been a while since I’ve used the pliers on my 557, but seems like they can cut slightly bigger wire than the Vic pliers and they have a hard wire cutter as well. But they’re thinner than the Vic pliers.I liked the tool choice on my Champ better than the 557 so went that route. I also carry a Knipex Cobra XS for when I need more than the Vic pliers.
Yep like this one:https://sakwiki.com/tiki-index.p4002hp?page=Wenger+RangerGrip+90And a few more via the Related link at the bottom of the page They would be hard to hunt down and very expensive/overpriced as sadly Vic did not take on these models.I would have thought that the Model 90 ie with the saw - would have had greater appeal and more customers than the Boatsman ie with the shackle key!