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Rehandling pliers, plasti dip, shrink tube, what do you use

Started by AbiggerGarage, Jul 05, 2025, 11:55 AM

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AbiggerGarage

One of my old favorites of pliers, the handles disintegrated.  What material do you use to give them a bit better then the metal grip (they are for electrical work so I would prefer not to be the ground)?

bonneyman

I use the heat shrink tubing method. Inexpensive, fairly durable, easy and cheap to replace when needed. Plus you can double it up for thicker handles.

AbiggerGarage


Uncle Buck

I like the heat shrink idea. I never thought about doing that.
Better hold onto something boys cause i'm fixin ta stand on it!

SteelWheels

Just an opinion, I think the plastic self-desingrating handles. Was and are useless; I can't call it an upgrade, because it was not.

Oh, sure, it eliminated half of the metal used for the handle.  Did the user benefit? I don't think so. Repairs and the time spent say no, I am thinking.

Just my .02
Pep


AbiggerGarage

Quote from: SteelWheels on Jul 09, 2025, 08:59 AMJust an opinion, I think the plastic self-desingrating handles. Was and are useless; I can't call it an upgrade, because it was not.

Oh, sure, it eliminated half of the metal used for the handle.  Did the user benefit? I don't think so. Repairs and the time spent say no, I am thinking.

Just my .02
Pep



So do you wrap your electrical pliers with electrical tape, or what do you use?  (the ones I was thinking of dipping I tend to use with fuses and such)

j.a.f.e.

I tend to agree with SteelWheels about not liking plastic handles. Not my favorite but I do have a few. OK, maybe more than a few.

I also think the best way to cover or recover them is shrink tubing never had good luck with plastidip. Three or four layers more if you like a little thicker. It's tough, inexpensive, easy to apply and fairly easy to remove if the need arises. It's available in several colors and a lot of diameters up to about 8" but it does start to get expensive over about 2". For best results use a heat gun not a flame or hair dryer.

In my experience tape is not ideal. It tends to shrink a bit and leave adhesive residue or maybe it just leaks adhesive but either way I always end with a sticky mess.
Words my mother told me: Never trust anyone in a better mood than you are.

If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn't thinking - General George S. Patton

wilbilt

Plasti-Dip is not very durable. It looks and feels great for a short time, but quickly degrades and flakes off.

Also, once you open the can you need to use it quickly, as no matter how you try to seal the can, the stuff dries out.

The heat shrink idea is interesting. I'd like to try it.

I would never use tape, as I have attempted to clean that adhesive residue off plier handles (my dad's lineman pliers and my grandfather's lineman pliers) and that stuff must have a nuclear half-life of about 75 years.

Hickory n Steel

I don't like plastidip,I tried doing  10 coats on a pair for extra thick durable grips but it was a waste of time because I could not stand the satiny surface it had and they were still easy to tear off.
I haven't tried heat shrink yet because I don't have a local source of heat shrink in various sizes and colors, but will eventually.

Air hose works great but doesn't fit all pliers and doesn't look the most professional.

Have any of you tried Klein Koat replacement grips ?
https://www.kleintools.com/catalog/pliers-grips/replacement-handles-6-inch-pliers

I have a hammer addiction,  and a 1/4 ratchet addiction, and a pry bar addiction,  and a screwdriver addiction, and well I just have an addiction to hand tools in general.