I've got a Irwin needle nose vice grip, and it's crap.
The jaws are all wobbly, and if you crank on it they twist and fall off.
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Irwin isn't what it used to be.
That's sad to hear.
It's been a long, slow slide but it's nearly impossible to keep track of which long-time tool manufacturers are still actually any good. Sadly this applies in power tools, garden/outdoor equipment and hand tools.
Hell, there's basically even TWO 'Craftsman' at this point, at least one of which (I think Sears could still use the brand name) is utter trash - I now just steer away from both. Troy-Bilt, Huquarvana, most Stanley power tool divisions, let alone the whole 'MTD' conglomerate - makes it miserable to be able to avoid the 'used to be a good brand but is now garbage' problem.
Irwin for me was always more electrician focused while most of my tools ranged in the general contracting and mechanic range, but most of my non-mechanic screwdrivers and maybe a few others...
My mechanic tools are (mostly bought used over time) Matco, SK, Snap-On, Mac, with some Park Tool added for bikes, some older Craftsman (I still have a ~30 year old or more Craftsman electric sawzall) and Thorsen, with some 'random from somewhere China), air tools a mix of older Campbell Hausfield, 1-2 heavily used Snap-On, 'plus some crap.' Other than a now-ancient HF mitre saw and polisher (bought the mitre saw for a specific job, was fine to be 'disposable' if it melted down at the time, still going 20 years later somehow), I gave up on 'random brand' cordless tools and went all in on Makita.. I had a monster 'mid-priced' Black and Decker 'Firestorm' cordless hammer drill have had for some time, but didn't trust investing in a full lineup considering quality changes with so many brands, which pretty much left Makita, Milwaukee, DeWalt then a few others with smaller lines (e.g. Metabo, Bosch).
Have added a few Knipex, Klein and Gearwrench misc tools over time, and Wilde for misc prybars, but tool prices, especially for the 'good' brands, has gotten even more insane in past years, and other than for single-use type tools, it's just not worth rolling the dice IMO on the quality or longevity in many/most cases..
Don't get me wrong - I buy 'cheaper' tools when they're lower use, but I expect when you're paying the $ premium for a 'good' or 'pro' brand - to get that quality, so both good and sad to know RE: Irwin...