Hello, I'm thinking about getting some more SAE wrenches here in Europe, and I'd like to get the Craftsman cause they use a cool style. Would have to pay a bit more to have them shipped from the USA Amazon, and I guess the warranty won't exist here...
Anyway, it's for occasional use on my 70's Harley, nothing very intensive.
I like the iconic style of a Craftsman wrench. I have one small old USA made one.
Is it worth it? Any other iconic designs they use? I kind of want a pear-style 3/8" ratchet too, but maybe I should just get the Williams instead?
110% not worth it. Craftsman wrenches used to be a decent budget option at one point in the past but quality got reaaally bad as they progressed into the 80s and 90's. At the end of the day, Craftsman is not a tool-producing company like Hazet or Snap-On, it's just a brand name. Production is outsourced to various forging companies and because of this, quality and finish may vary wildly between different years or product lines.
As for "iconic style", if you are talking about the raised panel wrench design, most of Craftsman's current stuff doesn't use that pattern. And like MarvinBerry said, the ones that do are basically cartoonized versions of the models from 50 years ago.
Raised panel is not unique to Craftsman though and can be found on budget lines for other makes too, Asahi and Toptul being decent modern examples. There's also a glut of super-cheap no-name wrenches using that pattern mostly because it is extra thick and can accommodate lower quality steel. Either way, I find raised panel wrenches to be not very comfortable in the hand. YMMV.
Craftsman ratchets have never been very good in the past and I wouldn't recommend them. The new ones seem like any old generic import model?
The new V-series stuff (wrenches, ratchets, sockets) is better quality than the rest, but it's mostly just rebranded Facom/Usag, so you would be better off buying that locally. Even the name "V-series" says a lot about where the brand is at these days; V-series was a forging mark on old Craftsman tools. All the brand has going for it is the name/nostalgia factor.
If you want to buy American tools for your bike, there are waaay better options. Proto, SK, Cornwell, Wright, Snap-On, Williams, etc.