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With a single tool, create both sharp creases and soft curves along the edges of sheet metal.
Rounded jaws reduce damage to aluminum and other lightweight metal.
These tools lock onto your material to prevent them from opening while bending and crimping.
These tools have five blades and compound-leverage action for more power with less effort than other crimpers.
The jaws have V-notches in 1/4" increments to measure the depth of bends.
Offset handles allow you to use these tools in tight spaces.
Turn your impact driver into a power crimper, and create raised edges on sheet metal more quickly than hand crimpers.
Create a raised edge in sheet metal that locks into the rolled edge of another piece.
Make different edge styles on your sheet metal with these forming tools. They come with rollers for turning, wiring, burring, beading, and crimping.
Create squares, coils, and S‐shapes.
Bend wire and rod up to 1/2" diameter and flat stock up to 1/4"×1" with these rugged steel benders.
Bend wire and rod up to 3/8" diameter and flat stock up to 1/2"×3/16".
For small projects, use to bend and shape metal wire.
Also known as ring rollers, these curvers shape wire, rods, and flat stock into curves and circles.
Shape sheet metal using your bench vise as a sturdy base.
Reinforced construction lets these benders handle thicker material than bench-top benders.
Position the movable forming dies, also known as fingers, to make boxes, trays, and pans in different widths.
Open sheet metal seams without cutting. The jaws slide under seams to pry the sheets apart.
Also known as slip rolls, these curvers create bends, curves, and circles in sheet metal.
Make deep folds in roofing panels and other large pieces of sheet metal.
Create long, uniform folds on the edges of sheet metal.
Save space in your shop by cutting, bending, and curving sheet metal with a single machine. Also known as shear brake rolls.
Fold corners in flat metal sheets to create your own bin boxes, drip pans, and other three-dimensional objects. Similar to tucking the corners of a bedsheet, these benders twist and wrap the metal into triangle-shaped folds to form corners.
Pull and pinch metal extrusions, such as L-channels, so they fit precisely around contoured edges and frames.
Make bends up to 90° in metal sheets.
Make bends up to 135° in metal sheets. Benders have a clearance of 4" for insertion and removal of large workpieces such as vehicle panels and duct work.
Protect thin-wall tubing from crimping and collapsing while bending by hand. These sets include sleeves for 6 different tube sizes.
Protect thin-wall tubing from crimping and collapsing while bending by hand.
Smoothly bend hard metal tubes, such as steel and titanium, without causing crimps or kinks.
Ratcheting action gives these tools greater leverage than standard tube benders for bending thick‐wall material.
Grip tubing from the side to make bends in tight spaces.
Make bends up to 135° in fuel, brake, and hydraulic lines.
Bend more than one size of tubing without adjusting the bending head.
Use one hand to make bends up to 90° in soft metal tubing.
These tools include one slide bar and 10 bending mandrels for 1/4" to 5/8" tube OD.
Bending mandrels for 1/2" to 2" tube OD are sold separately.
Powerful enough to bend conduit and pipe to the angle you need, these are for use on Schedule 40 pipe.
Create smooth, accurate bends in round heat pipe for routing heat away from sensitive electronic components and toward a heat sink.
Choose these benders for short‐radius conduit bending.
When you're working with exposed conduit, these benders make offset bends so your conduit matches knockout holes in electrical boxes.
Follow the easy-to-read markings to bend conduit to the angle you need.
A long handle lets you access hard-to-reach spots.
Place on the back side of your workpiece to act as a support when you strike it. Also known as dolly blocks.
These air-powered tools remove dents, smooth out ridges, and shape sheet metal more efficiently than manual hammers.
Repair ends of thin-wall (EMT) conduit that have been warped by cutting.
These hammers have a head loaded with metal shot for added weight and a controlled impact with minimal rebound. Use the domed end of the head for forming soft metal, rounding off edges, and closing rivets. The flat striking face is for driving nails, pins, punches, and chisels.
To suit a range of applications, these sets include hammers in a range of sizes and weights. Use the domed end of the head for forming soft metal, rounding off edges, and closing rivets. The flat striking face is for driving nails, pins, punches, and chisels.
Use the domed end of the head for forming soft metal, rounding off edges, and closing rivets. The flat striking face is for driving nails, pins, punches, and chisels.
The face and head are made of aluminum-bronze that is Factory Mutual approved, so these tools inhibit sparking, resist corrosion, and are nonmagnetic. Use the domed end of the head for forming soft metal, rounding off edges, and closing rivets. The flat striking face is for driving nails, pins, punches, and chisels.
Also known as body and fender tools, these hammers are excellent for forming and repairing dents in sheet metal components.
Set solid rivets by hand. These tools are also known as paneing, setting, and seaming hammers.
Also known as jeweler's hammers, these have smooth steel faces for precise forming and finishing work on delicate metal workpieces.
Hammer and shape metal on these anvils.
Hammer sheet metal into rough shapes using these forming bags as a stabilizing base.
Place against the face of your workpiece and strike with a hammer. The blow will transfer to the workpiece without damaging the finish. These tools are often used to smooth ridges. Also known as dinging spoons.
Pull coiled tubing through these straighteners to make it smooth and level.
Flatten bumps, bends, and curves on coiled wire with these straighteners.
With hardened rollers and precision-machined gears, these rolling mills stand up to heavy use. They’re often used to compress sheets to an uncommon gauge size, convert scrap metal into sheets or wire, or create different thicknesses in a single piece of metal without welding multiple pieces together.
The smallest round-nose pliers we offer allow you to bend and loop wire in the smallest spaces, including under a microscope.
Choose these stainless steel pliers for environments where moisture and other contaminants are present. They resist corrosion that can hinder joint movement, but the jaws will wear more quickly than a steel tool. Also known as round-nose pliers, use them for looping and bending wire.
Designed for looping and bending wire, these tools are also known as round-nose pliers.
The soft jaws on these pliers bend and loop wire without scratching or marring it.
Work under a microscope, and in other small spaces—the pliers in these sets are the smallest we offer.
Deep serrations provide the firm grip necessary for pulling rebar tie wire, and the hook-shaped handle end keeps your hand from slipping off. Also known ironworkers’ pliers, these tools also bend and cut wire.
Straighten a dented or crushed overhead door track instead of replacing it.