shoturtle
Well-known member
This is a champagne diet forum....for those who can only afford beer are not welcome. I realized this real quick!
So true.
This is a champagne diet forum....for those who can only afford beer are not welcome. I realized this real quick!
You don't have to pay tool truck prices for a nice ratchet.
Case and point... Known brand, dual pawl action, super comfy, and backed by some cool cats. For $25... Oh, and USA made...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001HWCPFS/?tag=atomicindus08-20
For $10 more then a Duralast ratchet I can get a ratchet I'd be proud to pass down to my grand kids, and know I'm supporting a US company.
Like a course tooth ratchet? Williams has you covered! For $24 you can have this 36 tooth model that is based on the classic Snap-on 36 tooth design!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Prefer a round head? We got you covered!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
You don't have to pay tool truck prices for a nice ratchet.
Case and point... Known brand, dual pawl action, super comfy, and backed by some cool cats. For $25... Oh, and USA made...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001HWCPFS/?tag=atomicindus08-20
For $10 more then a Duralast ratchet I can get a ratchet I'd be proud to pass down to my grand kids, and know I'm supporting a US company.
Like a course tooth ratchet? Williams has you covered! For $24 you can have this 36 tooth model that is based on the classic Snap-on 36 tooth design!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Prefer a round head? We got you covered!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools

You don't have to pay tool truck prices for a nice ratchet.
Case and point... Known brand, dual pawl action, super comfy, and backed by some cool cats. For $25... Oh, and USA made...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001HWCPFS/?tag=atomicindus08-20
For $10 more then a Duralast ratchet I can get a ratchet I'd be proud to pass down to my grand kids, and know I'm supporting a US company.
Like a course tooth ratchet? Williams has you covered! For $24 you can have this 36 tooth model that is based on the classic Snap-on 36 tooth design!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Prefer a round head? We got you covered!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
So true![]()
So true for maybe about 20% of the people on here (snap-on fanboys). The rest of us just want to get the most tool for the money we have.
So true.was wanting to see someone say it.
That *****, I was just about to pick up a new full set of Duralast ratchets.

You don't have to pay tool truck prices for a nice ratchet.
Case and point... Known brand, dual pawl action, super comfy, and backed by some cool cats. For $25... Oh, and USA made...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001HWCPFS/?tag=atomicindus08-20
For $10 more then a Duralast ratchet I can get a ratchet I'd be proud to pass down to my grand kids, and know I'm supporting a US company.
Like a course tooth ratchet? Williams has you covered! For $24 you can have this 36 tooth model that is based on the classic Snap-on 36 tooth design!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Prefer a round head? We got you covered!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
You don't have to pay tool truck prices for a nice ratchet.
Case and point... Known brand, dual pawl action, super comfy, and backed by some cool cats. For $25... Oh, and USA made...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001HWCPFS/?tag=atomicindus08-20
For $10 more then a Duralast ratchet I can get a ratchet I'd be proud to pass down to my grand kids, and know I'm supporting a US company.
Like a course tooth ratchet? Williams has you covered! For $24 you can have this 36 tooth model that is based on the classic Snap-on 36 tooth design!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Prefer a round head? We got you covered!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Three posts and already starting trouble
Truly spoken by someone whom has never had a "nice" ratchet. It's like calling a Civic a nice car.
Laugh if you will, but the best ratchet I've ever owned is a cheapie Task Force clone of Craftsman's thumbwheled tri-wing ratchet. I've put it through hell and back and it keeps asking for more.
You don't have to pay tool truck prices for a nice ratchet.
Case and point... Known brand, dual pawl action, super comfy, and backed by some cool cats. For $25... Oh, and USA made...
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001HWCPFS/?tag=atomicindus08-20
For $10 more then a Duralast ratchet I can get a ratchet I'd be proud to pass down to my grand kids, and know I'm supporting a US company.
Like a course tooth ratchet? Williams has you covered! For $24 you can have this 36 tooth model that is based on the classic Snap-on 36 tooth design!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Prefer a round head? We got you covered!
http://www.toolsdelivered.com/Willi...ols-3-8-Inch-Drive-Chrome-Ratchet-Drive-Tools
Yes most all tools have usefulness, even cheap ones, I've used an old great neck ratchet almost everyday for atleast 5 years, probably installed close to 200 batteries with it plus many many headlight and tail light assembiles, used the side of it as a hammer, taken coils off control modules, put tamper proof bits on it for mass air flow among other things and it is just now starting to get a little loose an worn, 5 years of abuse for a 10 dollar ratchet ain't bad
Indeed. I have quite a few ratchets. Two are Asian, a gearwrench and a duralast. I bought them based on recommendations on this forum. They are very good tools but I will not buy any more Asian ratchets. There is just no pride in ownership of such tools. For a non tool enthusiast they are fine but for those of us who take real pride in our possesions, including tools, then US or European tools are the way to go.well said
Indeed. I have quite a few ratchets. Two are Asian, a gearwrench and a duralast. I bought them based on recommendations on this forum. They are very good tools but I will not buy any more Asian ratchets. There is just no pride in ownership of such tools. For a non tool enthusiast they are fine but for those of us who take real pride in our possesions, including tools, then US or European tools are the way to go.
Indeed. I have quite a few ratchets. Two are Asian, a gearwrench and a duralast. I bought them based on recommendations on this forum. They are very good tools but I will not buy any more Asian ratchets. There is just no pride in ownership of such tools. For a non tool enthusiast they are fine but for those of us who take real pride in our possesions, including tools, then US or European tools are the way to go.
My comments were not meant to be insulting. Can you verify your 99%? A survey perhaps? I can assure you that 99% of tool enthusiasts take way less pride in a Chinese craftsman than a US Craftsman. A true enthusiast/collector will not pride himself on a duralast or a Chinese craftsman. Those tools don't and likely never will have long term collectibility or appeal. If you are a practical person who just wants to get the job done then duralas, gearwrench is the way to go.Y'know, the "99%" doesn't speak for me, and neither do you.
For those of us that weren't included in your insulting attempt at exclusion, those of us that also take real pride in our possessions, I'm incredibly proud of the value and quality that I've assembled in my pretty decently extensive collection of tools, both US and Asian (and a possible smattering of Euro that I'm not specifically recalling at the moment).
I'm a tool enthusiast, and, let's face it: Tools are the way to go, regardless of COO.
I would not totally agree with that statement, have you seen some of the japanese ratchets, very high quality and well sort after. They are on par with US and EU tools. Think this pride in ownership is a personal thing.
I would not totally agree with that statement, have you seen some of the japanese ratchets, very high quality and well sort after. They are on par with US and EU tools. Think this pride in ownership is a personal thing.
My comments were not meant to be insulting. Can you verify your 99%? A survey perhaps? I can assure you that 99% of tool enthusiasts take way less pride in a Chinese craftsman than a US Craftsman. A true enthusiast/collector will not pride himself on a duralast or a Chinese craftsman. Those tools don't and likely never will have long term collectibility or appeal. If you are a practical person who just wants to get the job done then duralas, gearwrench is the way to go.
I take pride in ownership for any tool that does it's job well and didn't leave me feeling like spent way too damned much. Sometimes those are one use tools and sometimes they're lifetime tools, I spend accordingly within reason.
The only time that tools are really an investment is if they are earning you money or saving you money. Otherwise they're depreciating assets, they'll sell for less than you paid, that's not bad in and of itself but it's also not the definition of an investment.
Again: SPEAK FOR YOURSELF.
You can't assure anything of the sort.
I take pride in ownership for any tool that does it's job well and didn't leave me feeling like I spent way too damned much. Sometimes those are one use tools and sometimes they're lifetime tools, I spend accordingly within reason.
The only time that tools are really an investment is if they are earning you money or saving you money. Otherwise they're depreciating assets, they'll sell for less than you paid, that's not bad in and of itself but it's also not the definition of an investment.
Again: SPEAK FOR YOURSELF.
You can't assure anything of the sort.
True that tools are a depreciating asset but do you remember the eBay sale the other day of a Cman RHFT flex head ratchet that went for $260? Ridiculous for sure but that will never happen for a Chinese made tool. The passion is just not there for that stuff.
There is no accounting for stupidity. Folks will pine for the good old days of Chinese tools when production moves to Rwanda in 10-15 years...
There is no accounting for stupidity. Folks will pine for the good old days of Chinese tools when production moves to Rwanda in 10-15 years...

Neither can you. Show me the proof. The survey, the eBay sales?
There is just no pride in ownership of such tools [Asian tools]. For a non tool enthusiast they are fine but for those of us who take real pride in our possesions, including tools, then US or European tools are the way to go.
Chinese tools will never be worth the same as the US stuff in the long run even if production went to Rwanda. There is no appeal to a thirty year old Chinese tool.
I'm not making spurious claims for any portion of the membership, sir, so I'm not really sure exactly what you're asking for, other than an unspoken request that people stop calling you out on your aforementioned spurious claims.
You said:
I stated that you're incorrect, because I'm a tool enthusiast and that I take real pride in my possessions, including the Asian-sourced ones.
So, in that respect, there's your proof (along with other statements in this thread) that your statement is demonstrably inaccurate.
Again: Speak for yourself.
Again, I never said that the current Chinese tools are bad. The car example also doesn't work. Japanese cars are very good but again the passion and appeal of a vintage Japanese car is not equal to that of an American or European car- the auctions are the proof. When was the last time a Goodings or Bonhams, or any other auction house had a large amount of Japanese cars on the block. When was the last time someone paid $12 million for a vintage Toyota or Nissan or whatever?and you have a DeLorean with a flux capacitor to know this. I think in 10 to 30 years you will regret that statement.
As the Chinese get better at doing things their tools may become equal or better than our own made here at some point in time. I remember a time when they said that the Japanese could never build a better car than us. Well we all know how that went......
I think you may have misread my statement, I said that there was a time that tools made in Japan or even anything made their was junk. In fact Japan was a lot like China in the late 40s and 50s and did a lot of copying. We are talking about a timeline that was 30 or 60 years ago. Yes I have seen some of the tools that come out of Japan today and I would agree with you that they are on par with US and European tools. I will also say that I have seen tools that come out of China that are getting close to the quality of US-made tools. I agree with you that this pride in ownership is a personal thing as well.