Loscaldazar
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2013
- Messages
- 2,385
Craftsman USA sockets and wrenches. The sockets rusted so quickly on me (started within a year or two, and some got real bad by year 3) and the wrenches are super short and uncomfortable to use. Find myself grabbing a towel when I really have to pull on one of those wrenches. Hate em.
HF 44" box. Not because it's bad, but because it's too small. I bought the 44 top and bottom thinking I would never fill it (came from a 14 drawer 26" set up, so the 44" bottom alone had way more room than the previous 26" box) The 56" or 72" would have been a much better investment. Kind of stuck with it for the next few years though (it has forced me to be incredibly efficient with tools storage though, and keep designing and making new tool holders for pry bars, magnetic pick up tools, screwdrivers, and some other odds and ends).
Milwaukee 8in dry cut circular saw. Again, not because it's bad (it's actually wonderful and my favorite circular saw I have), but because I should have gotten the deep cut bandsaw instead, as it would have been more useful for me.
Gearwrench zero offset ratcheting wrenches and the non locking flex ratcheting wrenches. Rarely use them, and certainly don't like them. Double box ratcheting wrenches are the way to go! Going to sell my current ratcheting wrenches and get some double boxes instead...
When I first started buying tools, I bought too much craftsman. Although, I have made a decent amount of money selling many of my craftsman USA tool sets, so at least it wasn't a waste of money. Has almost completely payed for my transition to SK, Proto, Snap On, Wright, etc for most of my tools.
HF 44" box. Not because it's bad, but because it's too small. I bought the 44 top and bottom thinking I would never fill it (came from a 14 drawer 26" set up, so the 44" bottom alone had way more room than the previous 26" box) The 56" or 72" would have been a much better investment. Kind of stuck with it for the next few years though (it has forced me to be incredibly efficient with tools storage though, and keep designing and making new tool holders for pry bars, magnetic pick up tools, screwdrivers, and some other odds and ends).
Milwaukee 8in dry cut circular saw. Again, not because it's bad (it's actually wonderful and my favorite circular saw I have), but because I should have gotten the deep cut bandsaw instead, as it would have been more useful for me.
Gearwrench zero offset ratcheting wrenches and the non locking flex ratcheting wrenches. Rarely use them, and certainly don't like them. Double box ratcheting wrenches are the way to go! Going to sell my current ratcheting wrenches and get some double boxes instead...
When I first started buying tools, I bought too much craftsman. Although, I have made a decent amount of money selling many of my craftsman USA tool sets, so at least it wasn't a waste of money. Has almost completely payed for my transition to SK, Proto, Snap On, Wright, etc for most of my tools.

, only a crazy person
would try to compress those springs without the aid of a super heavy duty wall mount/stand alone spring compressor !
...it's all about the right tool for the job, i will grab them for something that i would normally go to a channel lock for, but on low-torque multi-sized tasks such as threaded pvc fittings or brass couplings or other general purpose non-critical quick work.