Andres26tnt
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 11, 2018
- Messages
- 994
i agree most of the stuff they had was average and barely any hand tools, i don't understand.
Since no one else has addressed the elephant in the room, I will.
Garage Journal didn’t see hardly any action at all today regarding the new Craftsman launch. Are you just disappointed or don’t really care?
I watched most of the Facebook live feed and was disappointed in the entire rollout. They barely showed anything that the majority of people wanted to see. The details and information were vague and the products looked mediocre at best. I wasn’t expecting a HUGE made in the USA extravaganza, but I was hopeful for a little more than this. The announcer didn’t even know the difference between a drill driver and an impact driver.
The website has been glitchy all day. Many of the tools aren’t even depicted yet. Details are extremely vague. I realize that these things take time, but they’ve had nearly 2 years.
I’m also not a fan of Richard Rawlings and Chip Foose. They’re only there for a paycheck. Their presence doesn’t make me want to buy Craftsman tools anymore than if they weren’t there. I know damn well they’re using tool truck brands to work on their cars, unless they have to use Craftsman for product placement during filming. Don’t try to pull a fast one on me.
All in all, on a scale of 1 to 10, I give today’s launch a 2. Poorly executed and they didn’t really show jack **** to the consumer who’s been waiting and waiting to see what Stanley Black & Decker planned to do with the brand. What a shame.
I was impressed with what they are doing from a business standpoint. They are getting ta foothold in the lawn and garden space which will be important for the brand. SBD recently bought an implement business so they are expanding into light ag and construction in a way they haven’t previously.
We get myopic about hand tools on this board but that’s a 1/3 or so of Craftsman revenue and probably less for its profit. They will get there and maybe bring some to he US. Time will tell but it takes time. If SK is any indication, delivering a new tool to market takes years. If Craftsman has just cloned the entire DeWalt line of hard line tools, this board would complain. I am still giving them time and expect they will be able to return Craftsman to what it was (not what our faulty memories remember it as). It will be a dependable above average consumer grade with some prosumer offerings.
If SK is any indication, delivering a new tool to market takes years.
Exactly! Why did they just brush over the hand tools?? That is what everyone has been eagerly waiting for!
I’m actually pretty angry about the whole thing and it takes a lot to get me fired up.
Where is the stuff made? Are tools going to be available only in sets or individually? Can we buy single sockets and ratchets? Details on specific hand tool features...
They dropped the ball.![]()
Had I known that Chip "Put Some Fat Shiny Wheels On It and Call It a Foose" Foose was involved, I wouldn't have even bothered to look at anything.
SK isn't any indication. SK burned most of their bridges before Ideal bought it....
Ideal had to establish (or re-establish) partnerships with every vendor they've got now, and more than a few of those would have been hesitant, to say the least.
I don't expect many of the hand tools to be USA made, at least not for a while, if ever. SBD is going to invest its domestic production capacity into higher margin, or at least higher overall money makers. It costs a lot more to ay up a metal forging facility than a power tool final assembly plant and they are probably going to make a lot more off that power tool assembly plant. I surmised that the SBD domestic manufacturing footprint of forging operations for the products they already do make doesn't have the capacity to continue manufacturing those products and add the massive volume needed for Craftsman all to be sold at a lower price point. That's probably why we're still seeing that stuff imported and likely will for the foreseeable future.
Since day one with their unveiling at Lowes Stanley has been selling a couple different 'gunmetal' sets of sockets/ratchets that are rebranded Stanley brand sets made in Taiwan alongside several Sears' made in China sets. The Sears' sets (made by Apex) are a lot better value for the price (more pieces per $, deep sockets that are actually deep instead of Stanley's mid-length-ish versions, etc), and even more so if you buy them through Sears instead of at Lowes, especially if you use Sears' SYW club discounts.Just saw Craftsmans last instagram post. Their imports.
[image]
See the ratchet? same as Sears.
Since day one with their unveiling at Lowes Stanley has been selling a couple different 'gunmetal' sets of sockets/ratchets that are rebranded Stanley brand sets made in Taiwan alongside several Sears' made in China sets. The Sears' sets are a lot better value for the price, and even more so if you buy them through Sears instead of at Lowes, especially if you use Sears' SYW club discounts.
I don't expect many of the hand tools to be USA made, at least not for a while, if ever. SBD is going to invest its domestic production capacity into higher margin, or at least higher overall money makers. It costs a lot more to set up a metal forging facility than a power tool final assembly plant and they are probably going to make a lot more off that power tool assembly plant. I surmised that the SBD domestic manufacturing footprint of forging operations for the products they already do make doesn't have the capacity to continue manufacturing those products and add the massive volume needed for Craftsman all to be sold at a lower price point. That's probably why we're still seeing that stuff imported and likely will for the foreseeable future.
I'm even sure that some of the "USA Made" tools we know and love from our past would probably require the "... with global components" label if they were made now given the legal environment and label requirements of today.
But hand tools? How many wrench sets can they realistically expect to sell? how much profit can they actually make when they need to pay US labor and environmental costs to produce? This is where the warranty hurts the future of the brand. People can abuse the tools, then when it fails due to the abuse simply take it back and get a new one. There's not a lot of incentive for the customer to buy new or the company to make the product cost them more.
That is a really good, and mostly overlooked point.
I'm guessing there is more truth to this than many of us have thought about.
Thanks for bringing this up.
here is the problem what has Craftsman stood for in its many years of existence? 2 things lifetime warranty and USA tools. The number one thing i expected to be Made in the USA is the hand tools, not the Power tools.
Legacy and marketing are about the only reason I see them moving hand tool production back. I hope it happens, if love to fill my box with new Craftsman tools.
I was working all day so I didn't get to see any of it. But if those idiots Foose and Rawlings were involved, I'm glad I did miss it!
Other than knowing who they are, I know nothing about them. I don't have cable or satellite, and haven't for years. I never really watched any of the car repair shows on TV, since everything on them was fantasy land compared to my reality. They always take cars apart with hand tools, my mechanic had to use torches to get a hub assembly off my yukon that was put on 2 years prior because everything had rusted so bad
When I lived in Pennsylvania the gas axe was necessary for suspension work.
Then I moved to Arizona. In 2009 I took apart my 1987 Cherokee's suspension with a 1/2" drive rachet. All of it. Even the rear leaf spring bolts turned out. It's all about where the car spent it's existence. I'll never consider a vehicle that's spent time up north ever again.
You are correct, that is when all the gimmick tools come out !As ****** as that unveiling was. Looks like they’ll continue to heavily market to the Father’s Day and Christmas gimmickey tool crowd.
I wonder if they will warranty my old Craftsman wooden handle shovel ?I was impressed with what they are doing from a business standpoint. They are getting a foothold in the lawn and garden space which will be important for the brand.
Those ARE imports, but they are much better quality than they had 10-15 years ago. Now they are back up to at least HF quality !Just saw Craftsmans last instagram post. Their imports.
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LOL
"I want an American hand tool factory and I want it NOW!"
The selfishness of America is just unreal, but it is, alas, real.

There are a few to choose from, SK, Wright, Most of Proto, a lot of the tool trucks. You just need to support the companies by buying new from a dealer.
I get the nostalgia of the Craftsman name but, sorry, no amount of wanting, demanding, longing for, or tariffs are going to bring Craftsman back to its glory days![]()