OT: where to buy American made tools, Sears is going bust! |
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OT: where to buy American made tools, Sears is going bust! |
914 RZ-1 |
Jan 5 2018, 08:20 PM
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#1
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Porsche Padawan Group: Members Posts: 683 Joined: 17-December 14 From: Santa Clarita, CA Member No.: 18,230 Region Association: Southern California |
So where are people buying American made tools now that Sears is going out of business? I realize they haven't made them in America for a few years, but they did. Most of my Craftsman tools are made in the US. If I ever have any warranty returns, I'm going to likely get made in China stuff.
Home Depot, harbor freight and Lowe's get most of their stuff from China. I suppose I could go to a swap meet, but those tools are pretty beat up. SK makes good stuff but it's expensive. I've bought a few Proto tools and they seem good. What does everyone else plan to do? |
NoEcm |
Jan 6 2018, 12:34 PM
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#2
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Member Group: Members Posts: 95 Joined: 20-June 05 From: Seattle, WA Member No.: 4,309 |
All USA made Craftsman Tools at least 25 years old. See if you can figure out what's wrong with them before scrolling down for the answer(s).
1. 1/2" drive, 15mm, 36 point socket (this was supposed to be a 12 point socket but got forged 3 times) 2. Round drive, 5/8, 12 point socket (this one missed getting forged on the 1/2" drive end) 3. Can you guess what this is? It came in a package with other 1/2" drive sockets 4. 3/8" drive, 3/8", 12 point socket (the 3/8" drive end and the socket end are reversed and the drive end walls are now very thin) 5. 3/8" Drive, 7/16", 12 point socket (this one got forged as a 6pt socket twice) 6. Round drive, 14mm, 6 point socket (this one missed getting forged on the 3/8" drive end) 7. 9/32" drive extension (circa 1935) This one fits nothing that I own. A 1/4" drive socket won't fit on the male end and on the female end it just falls off a 1/4" ratchet. To learn more: http://alloy-artifacts.org/craftsman-early-tools-p3.html 8. #1 Phillips screwdriver. Too bad the phillips blade end got inserted into the handle. 9. 3/8" drive, raw socket. This one did not get embossed with the size or forged on the socket end. 10. 3/8" drive, 3/8", 6 point socket (on the drive end it got forged twice so instead to being square it has 8 points) 11. Open end wrench where the size marking got reversed 12. 3/8" drive, 3/8", round socket (they forgot to forge the socket end on this one) 13. Round drive, 6mm, 6pt socket (The drive end got missed in the forge) 14. Forging flaw that made it all the way through the chroming process (no, this is not a tube wrench) 15. The 5/16 box end of the wrench missed getting forged. Great for turning round nuts 16. This is what happens when you use an 8' pipe as a cheater bar |
Drums66 |
Jan 6 2018, 03:55 PM
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#3
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914 Rudiments Group: Members Posts: 5,321 Joined: 15-January 03 From: Coronado,Cali Member No.: 151 Region Association: Southwest Region |
All USA made Craftsman Tools at least 25 years old. See if you can figure out what's wrong with them before scrolling down for the answer(s). .......Breaker bar 1st & 16. doesn't happen!(or 1/2" drive) 1. 1/2" drive, 15mm, 36 point socket (this was supposed to be a 12 point socket but got forged 3 times) 2. Round drive, 5/8, 12 point socket (this one missed getting forged on the 1/2" drive end) 3. Can you guess what this is? It came in a package with other 1/2" drive sockets 4. 3/8" drive, 3/8", 12 point socket (the 3/8" drive end and the socket end are reversed and the drive end walls are now very thin) 5. 3/8" Drive, 7/16", 12 point socket (this one got forged as a 6pt socket twice) 6. Round drive, 14mm, 6 point socket (this one missed getting forged on the 3/8" drive end) 7. 9/32" drive extension (circa 1935) This one fits nothing that I own. A 1/4" drive socket won't fit on the male end and on the female end it just falls off a 1/4" ratchet. To learn more: http://alloy-artifacts.org/craftsman-early-tools-p3.html 8. #1 Phillips screwdriver. Too bad the phillips blade end got inserted into the handle. 9. 3/8" drive, raw socket. This one did not get embossed with the size or forged on the socket end. 10. 3/8" drive, 3/8", 6 point socket (on the drive end it got forged twice so instead to being square it has 8 points) 11. Open end wrench where the size marking got reversed 12. 3/8" drive, 3/8", round socket (they forgot to forge the socket end on this one) 13. Round drive, 6mm, 6pt socket (The drive end got missed in the forge) 14. Forging flaw that made it all the way through the chroming process (no, this is not a tube wrench) 15. The 5/16 box end of the wrench missed getting forged. Great for turning round nuts 16. This is what happens when you use an 8' pipe as a cheater bar (IMG:style_emoticons/default/idea.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/bye1.gif) |
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