kythri
Well-known member
I would have taken more pics but a store employee was watching me like I was going to steal these.
Yeah, those guys are fun.
I would have taken more pics but a store employee was watching me like I was going to steal these.


Maybe the quality will go up? Maybe Craftsman will go to another source than the bastards at dahner? I just fired off half a dozen emails![]()
Maybe the quality will go up?
Maybe the quality will go up? Maybe Craftsman will go to another source than the bastards at dahner? I just fired off half a dozen emails![]()
I'm not really worried about quality [although the return of metal selectors on the ratchets is great news] its the price.
I'm not really worried about quality [although the return of metal selectors on the ratchets is great news] its the price. If i want imported tools of passable quality i'll buy Toptul, Stanley, GW, Titan, HF Pro or any one of the other hundreds of quality imported tools at 1/3 ot 1/2 less than what Sears will be asking. The kicker is chances are excellent many of the products in those brands will be identical to Imported Craftsman.
As an example the Craftsman Full Polish wrenches [$99-China] may be very nice wrenches but i'll never know because i can buy very good quality GW sets for half that any day of the week.
Thats usually because they own rather than lease the store. Alot of sears stores are like this. My wife is a retail lease accountant.I'd suspect as long as it takes them to cycle their inventory in the store and local DC. I've gotten the impression that Sears isn't one of those places that will re-distribute inventory from a low traffic store to a high traffic one, so you'll go into some stores and find USA made tools whose production was long since moved to China, while others will have nothing but the Chicom stuff.
There is one store local to me that still had several sets, both SAE and metric, of the old Craftsman Professional combination wrenches. But it is one of those stores that hardly has any cars in the lot during the day, and most people are probably afraid to leave their cars in the lot at night. Frankly, it is a perfect example of why Sears is in such bad shape to begin with, they keep stores open LONG after every one else has moved away, and are often the last tenants in many dead/dying shopping centers.
That reminds me,
I was at two sears stores yesterday for black Friday and I looked for the premium ratchets (hoping they where on sale) and neither store had them in stock, although both stores DID have them a few months ago... I wonder if they are already getting rid of them? Or if they just took them down for black Friday?
EDIT: Just checked online stock and all 5 stores withing 100 miles of me show "Item Not Carried in This Location" for the premium ratchet singles. All of them had them in stock back around November.
Sears website said:Store pickup within 300 miles of 27612
This item is currently unavailable for store pickup. Limited quantities may be available in your local Sears store.
Please check more stores, expand your radius, or select Shipping
This has been bothering me all night.
There were some Made in USA mixed in.

I tried to go get a few Ratchet Rebuild kits the other day. You used to just be able to go in and get a kit if you needed one no questions asked. The kid behind the counter said that I needed to bring my Ratchet in now. So I went home and got my Ratchets to prove I needed the kits. The kid called the other guy and he opened a drawer with a few mismatched Ratchets in it none of which were the style I have. He asked what I had and I said I needed rebuild kits for my 1/4", 3/8" and 1/2" Drive Ratchets as they were all FUBAR'd. He then tried to trade me the rebuilt Ratchets in the drawer for mine! I grabbed my Ratchets and said NO WAY MAN! These have been with me for 15-20 years now and they have my blood in them. All I need is the rebuild kits. So yet another guy was called. This was the guy who rebuilds the Ratchets. He had to say he could not give me rebuild kits either then gave me the "Eye" to follow him. So I did and he took me back to his rebuild area and freely gave me the 3 rebuild kits. I said WTF???
He said' "Don't even bother asking it is just the way it is now." He even mentioned that it was less work for him and any ***** should be able to rebuild their own Ratchet. I agreed, gave him 5 bucks for some beer and left as he tried to hand it back.
What is wrong with this picture? Bunch of BS.
Re: 3/8" drive premium ratchets:
Nothing within 300 miles? Sounds discontinued to me....
Pity, really. I probably would have bought one of these if I could have fondled it in the store first. They're expensive enough I wouldn't buy one without seeing first. In my local Sears (or any Sears nearby, for that matter) they weren't stocked, and in fact most of the employees didn't even know of their existence until I told them about the ratchets. One thing you can say about Sears -- they know how to keep a secret....
They are probably shipping the tooling over there. I know a guy who worked for a company who specializes in that. They load entire plants on aircraft and 8 hours later unload it in China. Up and running quickly.I'm amused they kept the crappy flat panel design. You would think if they paid for new tooling they would go all polished, but apparently they want to continue their branding...
They are probably shipping the tooling over there. I know a guy who worked for a company who specializes in that. They load entire plants on aircraft and 8 hours later unload it in China. Up and running quickly.
Sears isn't dead anytime soon. Face it we are probably the only people in the country who give a rats *** about where a ratchet is made. Average Joe blow consumer just wants a cheap tool with a lifetime warranty. Now that sears has offshored production and kept the pricing on a USA made level they may turn a profit and they will make our fathers and grandfathers roll over in their graves.
he's got the red, white, and blue flyin' high on the farm
semper fi tattooed on his left arm
spends a little more at the store for a tag in the back that says u.s.a.
won't buy nothin' that he can't fix,
with wd40 and a craftsman wrench
he ain't prejudice he's just, made in america
Toby Keith, like most average folks, is sure everything there is USA. No one will notice. Sadly, Sears is likely playing this song at every meeting they have.
Lyrics should have been "Snap On" (and I'm not a SO nutswinger). But I guess this was supposed to be a common man song. Actually, better lyrics should have been "standard wrench" (i.e., not metric).
So, to the folks that have compared the two different ratchets (thin profile and raised panel) side by side, have you tried swapping the guts, and are they functional?
I ask, because I'm curious about future rebuilds...
So, to the folks that have compared the two different ratchets (thin profile and raised panel) side by side, have you tried swapping the guts, and are they functional?
I ask, because I'm curious about future rebuilds...
I was thinking the same thing...buy the Chinese in store, swap the guts and still have a US made ratchet with Chinese guts...better than 100% Chinese...
Also I'm not 100% sure but I bet you could swap Armstrong and Matco guts in the thin profiles.
Wish Sears sold rebuild kits I would buy about 3 for each one.
Over thie past weekend on black Friday I went to my local sears they did have people buying tools on sale; but just about every tools was made in China.
I am not thrilled about the made in china product with the high USA price but I have come to the realization that most of the tool companies are moving in that direction.
It was only a matter of time that the others would follow that course of action.
Woody
Wonder if the Chi-coms make a better RP ratchet than Danaher did when they made them here? From what I've read at GJ over the years, they couldn't do much worse.
The 3/8" socket/ratchet set i picked up for my bro in law for $10 is stamped made in USA. I was kind of surprised.

Finally, they had RAISED PANEL ratchet wrenches. I'd never seen those before. Short length, satin finished, raised panel combo wrenches with a craptacular 36 tooth mechanism. Made in USA. No sets, only open stock. After searching CMan website, I find them on there pretty easily, but I'd never see these before at my local Sears. I also wouldn't buy them... a few on the shelf didn't click. They seemed very low quality, but they were heavy.
Too strong?