Channellock pliers are the American pliers — the blue-handled tongue-and-groove that every plumber, electrician, and maintenance tech in the country has in a tool belt. The knurled blue grips, the laser-heat-treated jaws, and the undercut teeth that don’t slip on a pipe are details that haven’t changed substantially in decades because they didn’t need to. The same pliers your grandfather used are the same pliers on the truck today.
The 348 is an 8.5-inch combination plier — the general-purpose plier shape with flat gripping jaws, serrated pipe-grip section, wire cutter, and the crimper notch at the base. One tool for most day-to-day plier work, sized to fit in a back pocket or tool belt.
Channellock has forged pliers at its Meadville, Pennsylvania factory since 1886. Every plier is cut from American high-carbon steel, forged, heat-treated, and finished in Meadville, and the company is now run by the fifth generation of the DeArment family. The lifetime warranty is the kind of promise that only makes sense if you actually make the tools that well.






