OX Pro Philadelphia Pattern Brick Trowel – OX Grip


Size: 12"
Price:
$45.00

Description

Lay brick faster and cleaner with the OX Pro Philadelphia Pattern Brick Trowel – OX Grip. This 12-inch professional-grade trowel pairs a one-piece forged alloy steel blade with the OX Grip ergonomic handle — built to take the daily abuse of brickwork, blockwork, and structural masonry while keeping fatigue down across long pours.

Model: OX-P011212 · Blade Length: 12″ (305 mm) · Pattern: Philadelphia · Vendor: OX

Why This Trowel?

  • One-piece forged alloy steel: single forged blade and shank — no welds to fatigue or fail under load
  • Philadelphia pattern: the wide, balanced blade favored for bricklaying, especially on long bed-joint runs
  • OX Grip ergonomic handle: blue plastic handle shaped to reduce wrist strain on long days — not a rubber grip you re-glue every season
  • 12-inch blade: the workhorse size for mainstream brick and block; large enough for production speed, small enough for tight courses
  • Backed by OX: 90-day hassle-free manufacturer warranty

Specifications

  • Blade Material: Alloy steel
  • Blade Type: Philadelphia pattern
  • Blade Length: 12″ (305 mm)
  • Construction: One-piece forged
  • Handle Material: Plastic with ergonomic OX Grip shape
  • Handle Length: 6″
  • Handle Color: Blue
  • Trowel Type: Cement / brickwork
  • Manufacturer Warranty: 90-Day Hassle Free (OX Tools)
  • Package Contents: 1 trowel

Best For

  • Bricklayers: bed-joint and head-joint mortar placement on standard, modular, and oversize brick
  • Block masons: structural CMU and decorative block work
  • Stone setters: mortar placement for veneer and full-bed natural stone
  • Apprentice and seasoned crews: a Philadelphia 12″ is the standard masonry-school size — familiar to anyone who came up through the trade

Care

  • Wash mortar off the blade with water before it sets — cured mortar pits the steel finish
  • Wipe dry and lightly oil the blade between jobs to prevent rust storage marks
  • Store hung or with the blade clear of the toolbox floor — impacts can dent the leading edge
  • Inspect the tang where the blade meets the handle at the start of each season

You may also like

Recently viewed