Skeptic68W
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2015
- Messages
- 416
Hello all, hope you're having a fine Friday.
I do not make my living turning wrenches, but have several mechanically related hobbies (cars, motorcycles, restorations one day, etc) that I intend on participating in regularly for the next 50+ years.
I currently have a decent selection of tools consisting mainly of Craftsman Evolv, Regular craftsman (half US, half import), and stuff from Harbor freight that I have received as gifts from family, or purchased while I was in college (just finished grad school in May and finally have a real job, yay!).
As I continue to expand my tool collection, I'd like to start purchasing a little better quality stuff. I have no need or desire to buy Snap On/Mac/Matco/Proto, but at the same time, I'd like to have quality tools that I can be proud of and one day pass on to the next generation. I'd also like to try to consolidate into fewer brands when reasonable possible (I'll still buy lots of Harbor Freight stuff if I don't need accuracy or don't plan to use it often). I don't want a box full of 50 brands of tools (don't know why, just don't).
Had I been in this position 10 years ago, I would have just bought US made craftsman stuff. Professional series for wrenches and a few other things, regular for everything else. Now that the quality has tanked(fingers crossed that Stanley can move it back in the right direction), I haven't been able to find a brand that occupies the middle ground in similar fashion.
Let's take regular combo wrenches as an example, since I am currently looking for a set of 6 points in SAE and Metric.
SK - Slightly rich for my blood, but great quality, reputation, and USA made. However, I've been seeing stories about requiring a receipt to warranty out broken tools, **** that. On top of that, there are no SK retailers near me so I would have to do all the purchasing and warranty stuff online (not necessarily a deal breaker).
Gearwrench - I want to like gearwrench. The pricing, selection, and availability would allow me to buy a whole lot of probably good tools for not a ton of cash. Also, I spoke with a guy at my local NAPA and he told me that as long as they can find a part number, they can warranty any gearwrench product there for me, even if I didn't buy it there, I've heard advance is the same way. Both of these are also way closer than sears which is great. Here are my reservations.
It's a lot of money for chinese tools. They seem to be good quality, and most people are happy with them, but I have a hard time dropping that sort of money and it not saying USA on it.
I feel uncertain about their future quality. I'm kind of afraid that they will pull a Craftsman and once the name means something, cut costs hard and drive quality into the ground so even with your "lifetime guarantee" you're only guaranteed a new, lower quality replacement.
Mixed reports on quality. Some people say they like them better than their snap on stuff, other people say they opened the box and immediately returned them because the offsets were all fucked up, or the mechanisms were locked, or whatever.
In reality I'm probably going to buy a lot of Gearwrench tools, I'm just conflicted about it.
Craftsman - I wouldn't buy any of those lobster claws they call wrenches right now, but I could try to find some older professional series wrenches on ebay or at garage sales, and then just hope that Stanley starts putting out some good craftsman stuff in a years or two. As it is, I'd hate to buy US made craftsman stuff 2nd hand because you essentially have no warranty (exchange for garbage is not a warranty).
Tekton - Meh, good price point, look like fine tools, great warranty service, but sorta just like Harbor Frieight plus, not exactly a brand I'd feel particularly proud of having in the box.
What do you all think? I really wish there was a lower cost USA, or honestly even a Taiwan option. If Gearwrench has stayed with majority production in Taiwan, I would be far more inclined to buy their stuff, I just have a pretty serious mental roadblock for stuff produced in the people's republic.
Thanks.
I do not make my living turning wrenches, but have several mechanically related hobbies (cars, motorcycles, restorations one day, etc) that I intend on participating in regularly for the next 50+ years.
I currently have a decent selection of tools consisting mainly of Craftsman Evolv, Regular craftsman (half US, half import), and stuff from Harbor freight that I have received as gifts from family, or purchased while I was in college (just finished grad school in May and finally have a real job, yay!).
As I continue to expand my tool collection, I'd like to start purchasing a little better quality stuff. I have no need or desire to buy Snap On/Mac/Matco/Proto, but at the same time, I'd like to have quality tools that I can be proud of and one day pass on to the next generation. I'd also like to try to consolidate into fewer brands when reasonable possible (I'll still buy lots of Harbor Freight stuff if I don't need accuracy or don't plan to use it often). I don't want a box full of 50 brands of tools (don't know why, just don't).
Had I been in this position 10 years ago, I would have just bought US made craftsman stuff. Professional series for wrenches and a few other things, regular for everything else. Now that the quality has tanked(fingers crossed that Stanley can move it back in the right direction), I haven't been able to find a brand that occupies the middle ground in similar fashion.
Let's take regular combo wrenches as an example, since I am currently looking for a set of 6 points in SAE and Metric.
SK - Slightly rich for my blood, but great quality, reputation, and USA made. However, I've been seeing stories about requiring a receipt to warranty out broken tools, **** that. On top of that, there are no SK retailers near me so I would have to do all the purchasing and warranty stuff online (not necessarily a deal breaker).
Gearwrench - I want to like gearwrench. The pricing, selection, and availability would allow me to buy a whole lot of probably good tools for not a ton of cash. Also, I spoke with a guy at my local NAPA and he told me that as long as they can find a part number, they can warranty any gearwrench product there for me, even if I didn't buy it there, I've heard advance is the same way. Both of these are also way closer than sears which is great. Here are my reservations.
It's a lot of money for chinese tools. They seem to be good quality, and most people are happy with them, but I have a hard time dropping that sort of money and it not saying USA on it.
I feel uncertain about their future quality. I'm kind of afraid that they will pull a Craftsman and once the name means something, cut costs hard and drive quality into the ground so even with your "lifetime guarantee" you're only guaranteed a new, lower quality replacement.
Mixed reports on quality. Some people say they like them better than their snap on stuff, other people say they opened the box and immediately returned them because the offsets were all fucked up, or the mechanisms were locked, or whatever.
In reality I'm probably going to buy a lot of Gearwrench tools, I'm just conflicted about it.
Craftsman - I wouldn't buy any of those lobster claws they call wrenches right now, but I could try to find some older professional series wrenches on ebay or at garage sales, and then just hope that Stanley starts putting out some good craftsman stuff in a years or two. As it is, I'd hate to buy US made craftsman stuff 2nd hand because you essentially have no warranty (exchange for garbage is not a warranty).
Tekton - Meh, good price point, look like fine tools, great warranty service, but sorta just like Harbor Frieight plus, not exactly a brand I'd feel particularly proud of having in the box.
What do you all think? I really wish there was a lower cost USA, or honestly even a Taiwan option. If Gearwrench has stayed with majority production in Taiwan, I would be far more inclined to buy their stuff, I just have a pretty serious mental roadblock for stuff produced in the people's republic.
Thanks.


