Hi All,I’m a maintenance electrician and I’ve had the same Gerber 600 by my side for well over 10 years. I use it mostly when I get a call to fix something and either I’m too lazy to carry my tool pouch, or didn’t anticipate needing it.Last week I was trying to open a motor control cabinet and snapped about a ¼ inch of one side of the needle nose off. After wiping the tears from my eyes I decided there were four options. 1, Cut ¼ inch off the other side and make it a blunt nose, 2, send it in and see if they’ll replace one side of the pliers, 3, buy another one, 4, but a different one.I really like the one hand operation so I can open it without taking my other hand of the wires or whatever I’m holding, otherwise I’d buy a Leatherman. I use both blades and both the Phillips and straight edge screwdriver a lot. I use the crimper every once in a while. I use the wire cutters a lot. I use the actual pliers occasionally, but as with all the multi tools I’ve seen, the pliers hole seems to be too small which causes the handles to be uncomfortable to far apart when your working with anything over 7/16”. They also don’t seem to grasp very well. To deal with that, I also carry a Letherman Crunch also, which is very handy, but I don’t like the tool setup and never use it. I sort of narrowed it down to a SOG S62 or a Gerber Freehand. Any thoughts?Thanks,Steve
I also carry a Letherman Crunch also, which is very handy, but I don’t like the tool setup and never use it.
If there are any Multi tool engineers out there, this would be my (and yours) ultimate tool for industrial use. Some of this may be impossible. 1, Most of the time my needle nose is preventing me from turning a nut because of clearance, but I still need the needle nose for pulling wires. I know Gerber has a two head attachment, but would it be nice to have a way to extend a blunt nose into a needle nose when needed? Or better yet, have two heads in one tool and depending on which way you open the handles will decided which head comes out..2, Most of the time a bolt will be flush against a box, or a piece of steel. This means putting the tool up flush and trying to squeeze it with your finger tips because if you try to get your hand around the tool, you’ll lose the bolt. Put a hinge on the pliers so they can offset about 10 to 20 degrees from the handle after deployed. This is how most wrenches are made these days.3, Make the pliers with a fatter opening and tapered so that a nut from 1/8 to ½ inch will cause the handle to open approximately the same.4, Put the crimper on top of the pliers directly above the pivot like a Kline crimper. It’s a pain having it in the handle like my Gerber.5, I need a decent wire stripper, I don’t really need a scissor. When you go to Home Depot and look at wire strippers, what are they shaped like? Scissors. So fatten up the scissors, and put three or four holes in it so I can strip #20 to #12 ga. wire.6, I need a decent electricians knife for stripping cable. They are sorta curved like a carpet knife.7, Put the tools on one side, and the sharp stuff on the other. If I need a screwdriver in a hurry, I don’t need to be thinking or worrying about slicing my finger open. When I need a blade, then I’ll worry about it.Thanks,Steve
1, Most of the time my needle nose is preventing me from turning a nut because of clearance, but I still need the needle nose for pulling wires. I know Gerber has a two head attachment, but would it be nice to have a way to extend a blunt nose into a needle nose when needed? Or better yet, have two heads in one tool and depending on which way you open the handles will decided which head comes out..
2, Most of the time a bolt will be flush against a box, or a piece of steel. This means putting the tool up flush and trying to squeeze it with your finger tips because if you try to get your hand around the tool, you’ll lose the bolt. Put a hinge on the pliers so they can offset about 10 to 20 degrees from the handle after deployed. This is how most wrenches are made these days.
3, Make the pliers with a fatter opening and tapered so that a nut from 1/8 to ½ inch will cause the handle to open approximately the same.
5, I need a decent wire stripper, I don’t really need a scissor. When you go to Home Depot and look at wire strippers, what are they shaped like? Scissors. So fatten up the scissors, and put three or four holes in it so I can strip #20 to #12 ga. wire.
What I meant by keeping the sharp stuff on one side (#7), is that on this new (and allot of fun) S62 there is and extremely pointed tool (awl?) right next to the screwdriver and they seem to come out together. And the awl is longer! There is no need for that. Keep pointy tools in one handle, and tools in the other.