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Lineman's pliers are often called "Kleins," an example of a genericized trademark.
Twist the bared parts of the wires together clockwise, using your fingers or square-jawed lineman's pliers.
Premium Lineman's pliers may have the pivot point moved closer to the cutting edge in order to produce much greater cutting force.
Smart had bludgeoned Ward to death with a pair of lineman's pliers and robbed him of $100 cash.
Lineman's pliers have a gripping joint at their snub nose and cutting edge in their craw.
Lineman's pliers: Heavy-duty pliers for general use in cutting, bending, crimping and pulling wire.
Lineman's pliers sometimes include an integrated crimping device in the craw of the handle side of the pliers' joint.
The nose-end grippers of lineman's pliers are designed to come about 1/16" short of positive contact, when the pliers are fully closed.
She drove a Chevy Blazer to the prison and threw small bolt cutters and lineman's pliers over a chain-linked fence to the three prisoners.
Straight slip joint pliers are configured similarly to common or lineman's pliers in that their jaws are in line with their handles.
For electrical repairs, assemble a separate kit, including long-nose pliers, square-nosed lineman's pliers and a combination wire-stripper and cutting tool.
Lineman's pliers are similar to needle-nose pliers: both tools share a typically solid, machined forged steel construction, durable pivot, gripping nose and cutting craw.
Lineman's pliers can be used to bend or straighten heavy-gauge solid wire or sheet metal components, especially in cases where smaller pliers don't offer enough mechanical advantage.
There are many different varieties of slip joint pliers, including but not limited to straight slip joint pliers, tongue-and-groove pliers and lineman's pliers.
Lineman's pliers (US English), also called combination pliers are a type of pliers used by electricians and other tradesmen primarily for gripping, twisting, bending and cutting wire and cable.
A rotosplit is the ideal tool for this job, but lineman's pliers can be used to first 'crack' the spiral casing of the cable by bending it sharply, partially exposing the insulated wires, inside.
The gripping action of lineman's pliers is also used to pull fish-tape ends in a long (high-friction) wire run through conduit, to crimp soft metals, or to pull nails and other fasteners.
Professional Lineman's pliers are quite rugged and though not rated for striking, they are quite often used to sink (but not set) concrete inserts, pound nails, or chip small bits of concrete.
Lineman's pliers typically are machined from forged steel and the two handles precisely joined with a heavy-duty rivet that maintains the pliers' accuracy even after repeated use under extreme force on heavy-gauge wire.
If no saw or rotosplit is available, it is possible (though laborious) to use lineman's pliers to grasp the end of the cable and unwind 12 inches of stiffly-spiralled aluminum to expose the wire inside.
Wire cutters (for freeing a tangled horse) or equivalent such as a fencing tool or lineman's pliers; though these objects are often kept in a well-organized barn, an extra set in a first-aid kit is helpful for major emergencies.
Electrical Repairs A tool kit for electrical repair jobs should include long-nose pliers, square-nose lineman's pliers and a combination wire-stripper and cutting tool, in addition to the screwdrivers, utility knife and flashlight you probably already own.
Lineman's pliers have a tapered nose suitable for reaming the rough edge of a 1/2" or larger conduit, or cleaning sharp metal from the inside of a standard metal knock-out in an electrical enclosure such as a junction box or breaker panel.
Other tools have a primary purpose but also incorporate other functionality - for example, lineman's pliers incorporate a gripper and cutter, and are often used as a hammer; and some hand saws incorporate a carpenter's square in the right-angle between the blade's dull edge and the saw's handle.
As with most pliers and scissors or shears, lineman's pliers apply most force closest to the pivot-point of the two handles, so for larger materials, the closer one can get the wire or cable to the joint or 'craw' of the pliers, the easier and cleaner the cut will be.
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