Taiwan may be better than china.but they still use inferior metal and obviously use a different set of standards!
And I bet you have sources ready to defend this statement, right? Manufacturers use the steel they spec. And if a Taiwan manufacturer says they use 316SS, you can bet that is what you're going to get. Some Chinese manufacturers like to skimp on specs and substitute cheaper materials, but that really isn't Taiwan.
The op thought he was buying usa sockets! Thats the point.and he sees obvious differences in quality.sherry i normally agree with you on every thread but this one i differ.you guys that dont think there is a difference in quality in usa vs china/taiwan tools obviously dont have the experience i have.working on cars and truck or even on farm equipment or even diesel you may not see much difference.a diy guy wouldnt either! But i was an industrial technician for several years and i worked on american,german,and euro plastic extrusion machinery.we often setup new machines and every fastener whether hex or allen type were exact tolerances.the first thing my boss told me was if at all possible not to buy any cheap tools!.especially allen wrenches.luckily i didnt have any asian stuff but i did go to our local industrial supply and bought allen wrenches up to 1inch.every fastener had torque specs,some guys would buy asian tools and constantly were either rounding tools off,breaking them,rounding fasteners.i seen guys get hurt using china pipe wrenches.i seen it in parts the company would by such as bearings that would fail prematurely.c clamps the list goes on and on.so maybe the average guy may not see a difference but i know from years of experience there is! I make it a point to buy usa made tools when i need one while i can.i buy usa boots they last longer! Some things i have no control over.
You're far from the only person here who has a lot of experience daily working with tools in tough conditions. Far, far, far, far from the only one. There are plenty of plant maintenance techs here. But that was a nice attempt at trying to discount other's experiences with tools to supplant your own (I also enjoy how in one of your later posts in this thread you also imply that anyone who disagrees with you is hard headed while demonstrating that same mentality throughout your posts).
The thing is, we always have a few members like you who openly admit to having little to no personal experience with imported tools, but have an endless number of stories of other people foolish enough to buy "asian ****" and how every single last tool they ever picked up failed. Sure, you buy the cheapest Chinese 100 piece tool set for $5, and you're going to get a lot of junk. But that's a far cry from buying tools made by a reputable manufacturer in Taiwan. Those Taiwan companies care about their reputation and don't want to make **** that gets associated with their brand name. I've got a M7 (designed and made by King Tony Taiwan) mini impact that is smaller, lighter, quieter, and more powerful than the Ingersoll Rand equivalent. That's an impressive feat for a Taiwan manufacturer to beat out the company that is probably the biggest name in pneumatic tools. The M7 hasn't skipped a beat next to my USA assembled IR2235TiMAX (and I use the M7 more than any other impact because of its size and power).
If asian tools were truly that bad, why have so many other professional on this board been able to successfully do their jobs with them? Gearwrench, Carlyle, Toptul, are all brands that professionals have used day in and out on this board and had some great success. Not everything from Taiwan is great, but neither is everything from the USA (Lisle torx bits anyone? Easily the worst torx bits in the world that make HF bit sockets look like Snap On. Proudly made in the USA and absolute junk).
How do people in countries like New Zealand or Australia manage to fix anything then if Asian tools are such junk??? They have two choices for tools in those countries. Pay 1.5 to 2x the price we in the USA pay for Snap On (you think $100 for a TL72 1/4 drive ratchet is a lot, try paying almost $150 for one now, or $300 for a SL80!). Their other option is to buy one of several Taiwan import brands (Toptul, KinChrome, Sidchrom, Kabo, etc) for about what we pay for SK, Wright, or Proto. Guess which brands sell better and what more techs or maintenance personal use? If Taiwan tools were such ****, I think Australia and New Zealand would have collapsed already because they wouldn't be able to repair any of their factories or manufacturing facilities (and actually, Snap On is next to impossible to get in NZ)!
Just remember, Japan used to put out tons of ****. However, they modernized their plants, invested in building quality products over flashy/overly luxurious products. They kicked the USA square in the teeth by building faster, lighter, safer (please don't tell me you're one of those people who think the boats of cars from the 70s and 80s are safer than a car with crumple zones), and longer lasting than what we could build. It took us quite a few years to respond to what Japan was putting out, and probably only in the last decade or so are truly building competitive cars compared to the Japanese again.
Taiwan is following that same route. They used to just push out as much **** as they could, but they've really focused on making quality tools and building their brand reputations.
No one is saying that all tools from Taiwan or China are as good as tools from the USA. There are great tools from Taiwan (a fair amount of them actually), some from china (rarely, but there are a few) and there are also a fair amount of ****** tools made in the USA (lisle torx bits, Bionic wrench, craftsman acetate screwdrivers, spin wrench anyone?) as well as a huge number of fantastic tools from the USA. When you make generalized statements like all tools from the USA are better, or all tools from Asia ****, you completely miss out on the details of those statements and the broad variety of capabilities that each country has.
Also, I would suggest you stay away from hospitals, as a lot of surgical tools are made in Pakistan. Hospitals obviously aren't safe because they don't use USA or German made tools, and we all know nothing of good quality can ever come out of Asia
