View Full Version : Bolt Cutters…..
W&KO
24th January 2023, 09:01 PM
Why are they called bolt cutter??
I’ve never needed to cut a ‘bolt’ with bolt cutters….
The other day work asked me to bring up a set of bolt cutters as they’d lost the key to a lock….
I said so you need me to bring the lock cutter….there was a pause.
I said I’ve got this as I have the master key, to which they said that there is no way I’d have a master key that would cover this random lock…..
I turn up with grinder and cutting disc.
Soooooooo, still confused as the why bolt cutter are called ‘bolt’ cuttters
cripesamighty
24th January 2023, 09:10 PM
I was always under the impression that bolt cutters got their name from cutting the bolts off shipping containers. However, I've seen photo's of bolt cutters being used in shipyards in the late 1800's (way before shipping containers were invented) so don't know how true that is, or what they were called before then.
Slunnie
24th January 2023, 10:07 PM
I call them Skeleton keys also. :lol2:
RANDLOVER
25th January 2023, 02:15 AM
Crescent H.K. Porter | Crescent Tools (https://www.crescenttool.com/crescent-hk-porter#:~:text=In%201880%2C%20Henry%20K.,the%20nut %20had%20been%20tightened.)
"In 1880, Henry K. Porter, a partner in a machine shop in Boston, patented an adjustable “bolt cutter.” It was originally designed for blacksmiths to snip off the excess length of bolts after the nut had been tightened."
For small bolts around M4 M5 size I like the ones found on a lot of wire stripper/crimper combo tools, as they have a thread that you can screw the bolt in, so leave a nice clean cut, otherwise if cutting bolts with hacksaw or grinder I put a nut on the bolt first, then cut it and then unwind the nut which usually cleans up the threads enough to use.
W&KO
25th January 2023, 07:42 AM
I was always under the impression that bolt cutters got their name from cutting the bolts off shipping containers. However, I've seen photo's of bolt cutters being used in shipyards in the late 1800's (way before shipping containers were invented) so don't know how true that is, or what they were called before then.
Was wondering what the pin type lock on a container is called
Tins
25th January 2023, 09:50 AM
Was wondering what the pin type lock on a container is called
We always called the solid ones "bolt seals", or simply seals. This is based on them being customs seals, individually numbered and recorded. which is why they can only be cut, not unlocked. There are local seals as well, numbered for inventory security, but they usually only require snips.
Tombie
25th January 2023, 11:30 AM
Even more fun now with 18v Bolt cutters [emoji41]
Tins
25th January 2023, 11:43 AM
Even more fun now with 18v Bolt cutters [emoji41]
Yes. Cordless cutters were very thin on the ground when I was dealing with boxes.
RANDLOVER
25th January 2023, 11:52 PM
I was always under the impression that bolt cutters got their name from cutting the bolts off shipping containers. However, I've seen photo's of bolt cutters being used in shipyards in the late 1800's (way before shipping containers were invented) so don't know how true that is, or what they were called before then.
I should've known how bolt cutters got their name, as some of my ancestors were wheel wrights and coach builders. I am glad to know now though.
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