Talked to the SK peeps at their booth again today. Bad news for some of you. The classic SK combination wrenches will be made in China, Peoples Republic of. Ratchets and sockets will be made in the PA plant but, will use imported steel. All processes forging, heat treating, chroming, & finishing will be done in USA. Screwdrivers are a. Mixture. The black & green comfort grips will be USA made. The green rectangular handled version will be global components assembled in USA. I didn't get an answer on pliers. X frames will continue to be USA made. I did mention that some flex head X frames would be nice along with some zero offset versions. I also said they needed to place an anti slip open end on their long pattern wrenches.
There's an SK booth at SEMA this week. I spoke with one of the gentlemen working the booth and he said that the Great Star SK line up will be 1/3 made in the USA, 1/3 assembled in the USA from global materials, and 1/3 made outside the USA. The only item i saw that wasn't typical SK fare, was a couple of nice looking green tool carts with foam lined sets that resemble Homak carts. Loved the SK green. I think it will more time for SK to figure out what its lineup will contain.
Ideal wasn't (and still isn't) very good at marketing. Ideal didn't really know what to do with SK. Maybe they should have made an arrangement to be the premium exclusive/house brand for Menards, Lowe's, or some other company. Western Forge and Pratt-Read did mostly private label manufacturing, so I could see not advertising them, but Ideal really seemed to struggle with finding SK's niche.
Talked to the SK peeps at their booth again today. Bad news for some of you. The classic SK combination wrenches will be made in China, Peoples Republic of. Ratchets and sockets will be made in the PA plant but, will use imported steel. All processes forging, heat treating, chroming, & finishing will be done in USA. Screwdrivers are a. Mixture. The black & green comfort grips will be USA made. The green rectangular handled version will be global components assembled in USA. I didn't get an answer on pliers. X frames will continue to be USA made. I did mention that some flex head X frames would be nice along with some zero offset versions. I also said they needed to place an anti slip open end on their long pattern wrenches.
So, safe assumption that Great Star’s people ran the numbers and found that ratchets and sockets are probably where the margins are high enough to justify US labor? Curious to see if those items remain spendy while everything else goes for cheaper than when SK was with Ideal.Talked to the SK peeps at their booth again today. Bad news for some of you. The classic SK combination wrenches will be made in China, Peoples Republic of. Ratchets and sockets will be made in the PA plant but, will use imported steel. All processes forging, heat treating, chroming, & finishing will be done in USA. Screwdrivers are a. Mixture. The black & green comfort grips will be USA made. The green rectangular handled version will be global components assembled in USA. I didn't get an answer on pliers. X frames will continue to be USA made. I did mention that some flex head X frames would be nice along with some zero offset versions. I also said they needed to place an anti slip open end on their long pattern wrenches.
I asked earlier in this thread if Ideal was the one, that sold it to Great Star, or if their was a flipper in there somewhere. The reason I asked, is about once a week I find myself in the proximity of the factory Ideal built for SK. I was going to pass by there if its " assumed " to still be owned by Great Star and still operating as SK, to see how many cars are in the parking lot ( like 3 cars and they are packing tools in there, or 50 cars, they must be making something )I’m still bummed they left IL. It was pretty cool owning mechanic’s tools made in my home state.
My understanding is that Ideal did sell to Great Star but that the IL facilities were not part of the sale and that Ideal still owns them but they aren’t using them or something. I dunno for sure though, the Sycamore stuff is kinda confusing. I didn’t even see any mention about the sale in the local papers or anything when it was announced.I asked earlier in this thread if Ideal was the one, that sold it to Great Star, or if their was a flipper in there somewhere. The reason I asked, is about once a week I find myself in the proximity of the factory Ideal built for SK. I was going to pass by there if its " assumed " to still be owned by Great Star and still operating as SK, to see how many cars are in the parking lot ( like 3 cars and they are packing tools in there, or 50 cars, they must be making something )
Back when that was built, I did kinda of a " this is what the new place looks like " pics as it was being built/finished.
I grew up in Rockford, Estwing is still there, Dasco, Roper Whitney, Greenlee, come to mind, just in that one town. Ive got some from each one.I’m still bummed they left IL. It was pretty cool owning mechanic’s tools made in my home state.
Looks VERY similar to those sold by TOPTUL even the color matches TOPTUL green. Hey, Fed, drop by the house and I'll give you a new TOPTUL catalog. If you want something serious, like a loaded toolbox, I might be able to help you with that. Just sayin'.This is one of the two SK carts I saw at SEMA. The other one had like 4 drawers with open space at the bottom.
Toptul green is darker I think than the SK greenLooks VERY similar to those sold by TOPTUL even the color matches TOPTUL green. Hey, Fed, drop by the house and I'll give you a new TOPTUL catalog. If you want something serious, like a loaded toolbox, I might be able to help you with that. Just sayin'.
rant overI’m kinda wondering if SK might try the Sonic/Teng tools approach where you can buy whole kits in a tool cart. That might explain the boxes and the percentages of domestic/imported tools. You keep some bread and butter stuff high end and finish it off with some basic and medium level tools. I don’t know. It drives me nuts that SK cannot release even a modest draft of what their basic marketing and selling strategies are. Even SBD with their perennially late US Craftsman stuff has explained that it’s going to be limited items in kits and availability will be at certain retailers. Throw us a bone SK!Toptul green is darker I think than the SK green
Glad to hear you made it home safely. If I bought a loaded toolbox from anyone other than perhaps an Estate Sale, my family would have me committed
Seriously though, you bring up an excellent point that many people forgot, or weren't aware of, that SK hasn't always been 100% US made. There were the French made green rectangular screwdrivers, the Facom inspired tools, the trimaterial handled screwdrivers made in Slovenia, and those fantastic G-Pro series of ratcheting wrenches you mentioned. One has to remember that, aside from many members here, most people don't care much about COO. I mean look at the popularity of Gearwrench, VIM, or dare I say Harbor Freight, and others.
The key to SK's survival is marketing, marketing, and marketing. You have to first make tools before you can sell them. Make a **** ton of product, perhaps offering it at a discount initially celebrating the rebirth of SK, and make SK green as popular as sliced bread. Make a good product, and offer the email us a picture of your broken tool and we'll send you a replacement warranty service that seems to be popular these days. SK needs to establish a foothold in today's market stat.
Listen, I want SK to succeed. I've never liked their combination wrenches (too thick in the hips) and I have some ugly ratchets from the old SK days, and I won't hesitate for a second to call them out on something that ***** (like some of their LP90 series ratchets) but, at the end of the day, there are American workers in PA that are depending on SK. There are Americans that are selling, or will sell SK, and I think the world would be worse off without the availability of SK tools.rant over
Sk never made a 16mm 1/4 drive socket to my knowledge.. if you have 1 what is the part #?I have a local store that bought a **** ton of SK during or after the FACOM era. I bought a lot of NOS SK for cheap. Like prices that you would pay for Chinese. All of my SK has been garage/estate sales and NOS.
I have only paid retail, on Amazon, for 5 SK sockets. 16mm and 15mm 1/4” drive chrome sockets. I have never actually used the 16mm 1/4”sockets… but knowledge of their existence… and not having them… was literally figuratively killing me… and that is the slowest way to not die.
40715 six point shallow chrome. only size made, no deep version. page 25, 2015 SK catalog, Ideal owned. doubt if currently available.Sk never made a 16mm 1/4 drive socket to my knowledge.. if you have 1 what is the part #?
I bought them on Amazon a year or two ago. The vendor was SK themselves.40715 six point shallow chrome. only size made, no deep version. page 25, 2015 SK catalog, Ideal owned. doubt if currently available.
They did.Sk never made a 16mm 1/4 drive socket to my knowledge.. if you have 1 what is the part #?
Talked to the SK peeps at their booth again today. Bad news for some of you. The classic SK combination wrenches will be made in China, Peoples Republic of. Ratchets and sockets will be made in the PA plant but, will use imported steel. All processes forging, heat treating, chroming, & finishing will be done in USA. Screwdrivers are a. Mixture. The black & green comfort grips will be USA made. The green rectangular handled version will be global components assembled in USA. I didn't get an answer on pliers. X frames will continue to be USA made. I did mention that some flex head X frames would be nice along with some zero offset versions. I also said they needed to place an anti slip open end on their long pattern wrenches.
The only reason I ever bought SK was because they were made in the USA. There are many choices for imported tools.
What picture? Grainger?Unless I missed it, none of the tools state that they are made in USA. This is despite the expensive price tag and the "USA" stamping in the picture.
Lista is owned by Stanley in the US. Don't see SB&D's Lista division working with SK as they are competitors.With GreatStar owning Lista and Geelong, tool storage shouldnt be too big of an issue for SK.
https://www.lista.com/en/about-lista/Lista is owned by Stanley in the US. Don't see SB&D's Lista division working with SK as they are competitors.

On the SK website. For example, the 3/8 LP90 fixed head ratchet. Previously made in USA, picture of the item shows USA stamping on the item, $104. The description doesn't state that it is made in the USA (I recall it specifically stating that in the description before the company was sold). It may still be the same ratchet, made in the USA, however, it seems that they are specifically not stating where the items are made. Suspect that it gives them flexibility to source them however they see fit. No thanks.What picture? Grainger?
I agree that haters do exist, but it seems more of the disappointment is from those who supported SK, some who have an investment in their products.Haters gonna hate but I'm really happy to see the company up and selling product again.
Ratchets are USA madeNo way I'm paying over $100 for a ratchet that might be made overseas. They would be wise to at least specify which items are made domestically (kind of like how Craftsman has a made-in-USA emblem on various items).