Earlier today my metal shears/snips died and now my right angle die grinder is dead.
Arguably both were my fault, but still...
The shears died when I was trying to cut 1/8" aluminum stock. They made three cuts fine, and on the fourth, the main pivot bolt broke.
The right angle die grinder died because the gears inside that make the 90 degree transfer stripped out. I think this is related to a retaining clip that came loose previously. I think when that got loose it chewed up the gears and then the rough edges and metal particles did the rest.
So it off the HF for some new tools. The new right angle grinder will get some locktite first thing so that retaining ring will not come loose.
Mark,
were these the pneumatic versions? (gulp - i have both!)
jbb
QUOTE (Jeff Bonanno @ Sep 10 2005, 03:23 PM) |
Mark, were these the pneumatic versions? (gulp - i have both!) jbb |
The shears were hand operated. The die grinder was pneumatic. On the die grinder, you can check the retaining ring (blue arrow).
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Yup,
Cheep Chinese POS.
I ate a Harbor Freight pneumatic sawzall this week. Screws on the back installed crooked, screw holding the blade cover was stripped, lotsa metal shards coming out after oiling, and then it just quit after less than an hours use.
Solution? No more $40 Harbor Freight crap for me. Bought a Craftsman 13 amp sawzall for $100. Take it back if it breaks.
Ken
Rich bastard.
J/K.
I don't like HF.
Never have. It's like an indoor flea market.
Only thing I have ever bought from there was razor blades and grinder wheels.
If you need to use a tool more than a couple times a year,
DO NOT BUY FROM THEM.
How would you feel if I showed up with a HF tile saw?
Buy Makita, DeWalt, Milwaukee, Bosch.
I'll stoop to Ryobi for light duty, rarely used tools.
Again, do as you please. Tools should be an investment, not a liabilty.
KT
QUOTE (trekkor @ Sep 10 2005, 03:49 PM) |
I don't like HF. Never have. It's like an indoor flea market. Only thing I have ever bought from there was razor blades and grinder wheels. If you need to use a tool more than a couple times a year, DO NOT BUY FROM THEM. How would you feel if I showed up with a HF tile saw? Buy Makita, DeWalt, Milwaukee, Bosch. I'll stoop to Ryobi for light duty, rarely used tools. Again, do as you please. Tools should be an investment, not a liabilty. KT |
I have found that buying cheap HF product insurance is the most economical when buying their crap. Bought a $70 pressure washer it failed in a few months after extensive use and abuse. Brought it back and was given a new one no questions asked. It has been fine for multiple uses.
You might just try bringing it back and saying you have product insurance. They never validated whether I had insurance or not. I just said I have insurance on this product and a guy brought out a new product.
QUOTE (trekkor @ Sep 10 2005, 03:49 PM) |
How would you feel if I showed up with a HF tile saw? KT |
QUOTE (trekkor @ Sep 10 2005, 07:49 PM) |
I don't like HF. Never have. It's like an indoor flea market. Only thing I have ever bought from there was razor blades and grinder wheels. If you need to use a tool more than a couple times a year, DO NOT BUY FROM THEM. How would you feel if I showed up with a HF tile saw? Buy Makita, DeWalt, Milwaukee, Bosch. I'll stoop to Ryobi for light duty, rarely used tools. Again, do as you please. Tools should be an investment, not a liabilty. KT |
So, you're out what, $35?
Buy new ones and throw them away when they break, then buy another set. that should last you a lifetime and cost the same as one craftsman POS tool (also made in china or india).
I have been using HF tools for years and have never had anything fail except i broke a handle on a framing hammer due to mis-use, the gave me a new one free.
If you are into name brands all I have to say is a fool and his money.............
Hey Aaron!
HIJACK
New York is treating me well. i am still living in jersey and commuting to the city each day. we are trying to finalize a deal on a house in westchester - it has a garage which may yet support a teener addiction. my workshop is still in long term storage
got a faculty job at columbia univ and a directorship at a facility based at city college of ccny. beats the unemployment line.
miss the sun and fun of socal tho...
END HIJACK
jbb
$35
The grinder was like $10. Or I can go to a "real" store and pay $50 or $75. Hmmmmmm.
Here's my final comment on this subject:
You can buy high quality tools that will last for years or you can save a little money intially, but spend countless hours returning and replacing them later for years.
OUT...
KT
Are you saying I can't count?
I don't understand the question?
That doesn't count as another comment...
KT
QUOTE (Sammy @ Sep 10 2005, 05:01 PM) |
So, you're out what, $35? Buy new ones and throw them away when they break, then buy another set. that should last you a lifetime and cost the same as one craftsman POS tool (also made in china or india). I have been using HF tools for years and have never had anything fail except i broke a handle on a framing hammer due to mis-use, the gave me a new one free. If you are into name brands all I have to say is a fool and his money............. |
Well I broke down and bought the real deal at my local NAPA. $70. Nice tool though. Used it all day today already. The expensive one definitely spins more smoothly than the HF one.
I am a big fan of HF. Do you really need to spend 5x more on a name brand bench vise, for example? It's just a hunk of metal...
The failure of your HF grinder is most likely due to the lack of the proper gear lube (tube and injection gun pictured in the lower/center). I have to use a right-angle die grinder, and numerous other pneumatic tools all day, every day, and if you don't keep the gear head lubed (about once a month) they will overheat and die regardless of the initial quality of the tool. There should be a little zert on the back of the gear head housing........one pump of the lube'll do ya!
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Harbor Frieght has its uses. Their grinders feel like shit. To sloppy and harsh. My Dewalt side grinder is super smooth and doesn't bog out like the toys from HF. But I will buy things like grinder wheels, C-clamps, magnetic tool trays, tarps, tie downs, etc. That kind of stuff is what they are good for. No need paying Sears or Mac 20-50 dollars for a tool tray when you can buy the same one for 2$ at HF.
Tools are an investment and if you use them often and hard then buy good stuff. If you hardly use them, may go with cheap shit.
QUOTE (grantsfo @ Sep 10 2005, 04:04 PM) | ||
I'd say I want a 10% discount! |
QUOTE (trekkor @ Sep 10 2005, 03:49 PM) |
I don't like HF. Only thing I have ever bought from there was razor blades and grinder wheels. If you need to use a tool more than a couple times a year, DO NOT BUY FROM THEM. Buy Makita, DeWalt, Milwaukee, Bosch. I'll stoop to Ryobi for light duty, rarely used tools. Again, do as you please. Tools should be an investment, not a liabilty. KT |
If it wasn't for HF I prolly wouldn't be driving my car right now, I wouldn't have been able to afford parts 'cause I spent too much on tools.
HF been good to me so far, knock knock.
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