A few years ago, I was tightening something and torqued off a socket extension. Looking at it, I realized it was the last remaining piece of the cheap-*** socket set I'd bought at KMart in 1979, when I was young, piss-poor, and newly out on my own. Anyone of a certain age remembers those; cheap roundhead ratchets, sockets seemingly made out of pot metal, in a painted tin case with a thin blow-molded insert. They were sold everywhere. Somehow the extension had escaped from the rest of the junky set and stayed with me as I accumulated better tools, finally to be picked accidentally and die under moderate load.
It got me to thinking. It's certainly still possible to buy lower or higher quality tools, at lower or higher prices. But are the tools we'd call "junky" today anywhere near as bad as junky tools of past decades like that KMart socket set?
Typically the poster child for cheap Chinesium tools is Harbor Freight. And I'm certainly not claiming HF is the pinnacle of quality, but I have a few HF tools that are miles better than the junk tools I had in the 1980s. I've got a set of Pittsburgh box end ratchets that are actually quite nicely chromed and have stood up to abuse. Similarly, I can go to Lowe's or HD or Menards, and pick up tools from Kobalt and Husky and Masterforce that, although not the best available, are usually more serviceable than the barely usable junk that cluttered my toolbox 40 years ago.
So are we spoiled now? Are today's "junk tools" notably better than yesteryear's? Or is this just selective memory on my part?
It got me to thinking. It's certainly still possible to buy lower or higher quality tools, at lower or higher prices. But are the tools we'd call "junky" today anywhere near as bad as junky tools of past decades like that KMart socket set?
Typically the poster child for cheap Chinesium tools is Harbor Freight. And I'm certainly not claiming HF is the pinnacle of quality, but I have a few HF tools that are miles better than the junk tools I had in the 1980s. I've got a set of Pittsburgh box end ratchets that are actually quite nicely chromed and have stood up to abuse. Similarly, I can go to Lowe's or HD or Menards, and pick up tools from Kobalt and Husky and Masterforce that, although not the best available, are usually more serviceable than the barely usable junk that cluttered my toolbox 40 years ago.
So are we spoiled now? Are today's "junk tools" notably better than yesteryear's? Or is this just selective memory on my part?
