Roark Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 On September 2, 2001 David Horne became the second man, so far as is known, to close one of Ed Jubinville's grippers. Ed had about 100 of them manufactured; the company, now headed by Ed's son has no more grippers in stock, and no plans to reproduce the item. I have been waiting for David to mention his accomplishment, then realized he might think it sounded boastful, so without his permission I am mentioning it. (Hope you don't mind, David). Richard Sorin was the first person to close the J-gripper, which has a closing requirement some- where in the neighborhood of the #3 CofC; of course, I have never been in either of those neighborhoods, so Richard or David will have to be your tour guide for this very rare gripper. One of the few things rarer than the J-gripper is locating anyone with a bad word about Ed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Piche Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 Anyone know where the gripper measures? From what I have heard, they are a beast. Definitely not comparable to an average #3! Non-knurled handles too? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bearcat 74 Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 Way to go David! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tom Black Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 Richard Sorin's Jubinville was tested by PDA at 428 pounds-inch (See Number 19), which is above the average for a #3. Wow, if there was no knurling that would make it very difficult. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roark Posted September 6, 2001 Author Share Posted September 6, 2001 I believe the Jubinville gripper that David closed has knurled handles, does it not, David? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Horne Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 Thanks, Joe. I have a nice collection of grippers, some 60+. Some beautiful and rare items such as the Jubinville, Iron Man (non knurled), Sandow, Dryer, Benny Leonard, 30's Terry's, etc, etc. They all have an area in my office allocated for them. About 70% of them are used, with the weak ones being ideal for the small juniors. My youngest son Alex who is 9, has now graduated from the Henry Cooper grippers to the Terrys now, and loves them. Anyway, I've kind of got off the subject. But they are great fun. The Jubinville gripper was given to me by Joe Roark for my grip memorabilia collection. It is a little bit tougher than the strongest #3 I've closed, which incidentally is on it's way to PDA to be calibrated. Not for any particular glory mission, but I wanted two grippers from PDA that will be tougher than that one. Although I do have 3 other grippers that are harder than this. These are #4 Ironmind, 1970's Super Ironman (no knurling), and a Super Ironman, which incedentally I closed whilst steadying my wrist with my other hand, the other day. Of course it's not official, but it's there very soon. Hopefully the PDA grippers poundages can fall between the two Ironman grippers, and between the #4 and the non knurled Ironman. David Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Piche Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 I don't view it as a glory mission at all. I think it's great actually. Gives us all a target to train for. Something a bit more meaningful. As Tom Black put it into perspective, what's being done today will help clarify things for those that come in the future. So, the "myth" aspect or speculation doesn't have to be the norm. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1stCoC Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 The last Jubinville gripper I closed in John Brookfields presence shattered and wounded my left hand where we had trouble stopping the bleeding. This was in the early 90 s and it now lies in my mini museum.They were welded at the handle and spring junction very rough construction AND dangerous. Never will I try one again. I think... what if that was my eye?...RS Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sybersnott Posted September 6, 2001 Share Posted September 6, 2001 David, Care to part with any of your grippers? Give me a shout! Sybersnott Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest kINGPIN Posted September 7, 2001 Share Posted September 7, 2001 Same goes for me! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Davekline Posted May 18, 2004 Share Posted May 18, 2004 Didn't Ed Jubinville also make a plate loaded gripping machine? If so, is it still available, and where? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matt Van Weele Posted May 18, 2004 Share Posted May 18, 2004 Never seen this topic. It's a pretty interesting one. Thanks for digging it up. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tom Page Posted May 22, 2004 Share Posted May 22, 2004 Man I sure would like to add a Jubinville gripper to my collection Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ROBOHANDS Posted May 22, 2004 Share Posted May 22, 2004 (edited) I have an old gripper that may be a Jubinville. How would I confirm It fits the descriptions above: Non-knurled, just easier than a #4. The handles feel like solid steel and the skew of the spring is very sloppy (i.e. a lot of lateral movement of the handles when squeezed.) Edited May 22, 2004 by ROBOHANDS Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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