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Best Craftsman Tools

bigjeff94

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Oct 15, 2014
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212
Location
USA
Hey guys as a young guy starting to build up my toolbox I was wondering what you guys thought were some of your favorite craftsman tools available at sears. My sockets and ratchets are all craftsman and so are my wrenches all U.S.A raised panel stock. I've been keeping an eye on the 41 pc. screwdriver set the 3 piece professional pry bar set and a 4 piece plier set but i've also been looking at a few other brands of tools at harry epstein that i'd like to get my hands on. However getting tools at sears is extremely convenient for me so i wanted to know what you guys thought.
 
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wagzilla

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Dec 11, 2012
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604
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Arizona
I t just depends iif your going to tune wrenches for a living or just as a hobbie, great starter box!!

James
 

340wedge

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Sep 8, 2012
Messages
391
For me, I started buying in the early 1980's. At the time for a teen, doing work on hot rods, Craftsman ratchets and sockets and screwdrivers fit the bill well. At the time they were light years ahead of some of the dime store junk tools my father had where the screw driver stripped and the screw didn't LOL. I still have them, but mostly I really like the diagnostic stuff, I still have the dwell tach, compression, vacumm testers etc. All still work like new over 35 years later.:3gears:
 
OP
B

bigjeff94

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Oct 15, 2014
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USA
Thanks wagzilla. I'm studying to become a Mine Engineer but I'm working summers and winters as a repair welder at a materials processing plant and were expected to also be able to work with the millwrights so now that i'm getting to old to mooch off of my dads tools it's time i build my set. I'm looking for a set that'll make it through some tough industrial work and hopefully last a lifetime.
 

oldldh

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May 22, 2012
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Fairhope, AL
:+1:

I've got them all...

Professional---Nope...

Weekend mess-maker---Yep!!!

All "Forged in USA!!!"...

Best bang for the buck...
 

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Manny2_0

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Oct 7, 2014
Messages
146
I think the pliers are simply ok if you get a set on sale,
They are not impressive, however good enough for my use

I do not see them standing up in an everyday setting...
speaking for the
8in long nose
8in slip joint
7in diagonal
6in diagonal
10in arc joint

buying individually NO WAY, way overpriced in my opinion



for made in usa they are the easily avail option
channel lock is another option

pros
easily available and on sale pretty often
made usa
warranty

con
plastic handle simply blows
not impressive
 
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AceofSpad3s

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Oct 1, 2014
Messages
1,808
Off topic but I would suggest taking a good look at husky, I like the stuff for the price plus the warranty is really good. Considering sears is in deep **** and could go down if they do bad this Christmas from what I have heard,I would be cautious.
 

John in OH

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Jun 2, 2007
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2,444
Location
SE Ohio & Eastern Virginia
I've always liked the red & black handled Cman Pro screwdrivers; however, Sears has discontinued them (grrrr!!). But, some are still available on the clearance racks (but not discounted in price). If you like these screwdrivers, they are available from SK as their cushion grip line .... but, of course, the handles are green & black!

Those long pattern double boxes referenced by Toyota Mechanic are also nice ... especially if you can find a USA set.
 

Manny2_0

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Oct 7, 2014
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146
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wild cowboy

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Mar 11, 2014
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Birmingham
you can get the discontinued Craftsman Professional strikable pry bars under the Mayhew brand (Craftsman's OEM) - try zoro tools or Tooltopia for good prices.
 

Hammer1963

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Jan 2, 2011
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Location
Kentucky
The dark Brown wood handled Ball pein hammers, cross pein hammer, drilling hammer are all top quality
 

woody 73

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Apr 14, 2009
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11,547
Location
The Great State Up North
I think you missed the sale but not to long ago Sears had the Industrial wrench sets in their outlet stores, you might have good luck if you use Ebay and pick up a set.
 

bcradio

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Jan 30, 2012
Messages
6,017
Location
New Mexico
skip the clear handle screwdrivers as there are better options.

The thin profile ratchets are nice if you are looking to upgrade your existing. Look at Williams or Wiha for your screw-driving needs.
 

Flattie

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Dec 30, 2013
Messages
151
Location
Kansas
3/8 premium 84t ratchet. I love it! Then I bought the 1/2" version. I love it more! They probably get close to the price of tool truck brands, but I live in the sticks, so that idea was out. I hope I don't get flamed for liking a Craftsman ratchet...
 

Moose97

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Jul 11, 2013
Messages
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Location
North Central Texas
I think the Craftsman line is a great way to go for a young guy starting out. I've had mine for years and they hold up great. Still buying them. Good selection and a good price.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

theoldwizard1

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Feb 22, 2011
Messages
43,275
Location
SE MI
I have a Craftsman 3 piece stubby, double box end set in SAE. Very handy. I wish they made the same for metric.
 

wild cowboy

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hey young guy original poster:

let you in on a little secret,

There is very little, if any, difference in quality and durability among the USA and Taiwan tools from the following brands:

Mac
Matco
Craftsman (USA and Taiwan only)
Cornwell
Carlyle
Snap-On
Wright
Armstrong
SK
Williams
Proto
Kobalt
Easco
Taiwan-built Harbor Freight (not the China stuff)

and a few others I could name

Don't let price be an indicator of quality, in tools, once you are at a certain level of quality, it just doesn't get much better

In fact, many of these brands are made by other companies on this list, for example, Armstrong makes a lot of Matco tools, Williams has built many tools for Snap-On and Kobalt, my Carlyle roto ratchet is built for Mac and Cornwell, etc.
 
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BirdMobile

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Aug 16, 2014
Messages
588
Hey guys as a young guy starting to build up my toolbox I was wondering what you guys thought were some of your favorite craftsman tools available at sears. My sockets and ratchets are all craftsman and so are my wrenches all U.S.A raised panel stock. I've been keeping an eye on the 41 pc. screwdriver set the 3 piece professional pry bar set and a 4 piece plier set but i've also been looking at a few other brands of tools at harry epstein that i'd like to get my hands on. However getting tools at sears is extremely convenient for me so i wanted to know what you guys thought.

The 2 Cobra set of pliers marked "Made in Germany". They are Knipex, with different colored handles.

I personally paid more for actual Knipex brand, I can't stomach giving Sears any of my money any more.
 

JAKE-THE-TOOL-MAN

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Oct 20, 2010
Messages
1,157
Location
Bremerton, WA
hey young guy original poster:

let you in on a little secret,

There is very little, if any, difference in quality and durability among the USA and Taiwan tools from the following brands:

Mac
Matco
Craftsman (USA and Taiwan only)
Cornwell
Carlyle
Snap-On
Wright
Armstrong
SK
Williams
Proto
Kobalt
Easco
Taiwan-built Harbor Freight (not the China stuff)

and a few others I could name

Don't let price be an indicator of quality, in tools, once you are at a certain level of quality, it just doesn't get much better

In fact, many of these brands are made by other companies on this list, for example, Armstrong makes a lot of Matco tools, Williams has built many tools for Snap-On and Kobalt, my Carlyle roto ratchet is built for Mac and Cornwell, etc.

I am convinced you are either anti USA or you cannot afford top quality tools built in the USA. You're always dissing great brands in favor of Taiwan. Btw Williams is an industrial rebrand of Snap On, Snap on owns the Williams name. Same with Matco and Armstrong I believe. Craftsman used to make quality American tools but pissed a lot of people off when they started outsourcing to China. Regardless, I believe Craftsman is a cheap cost effective way to start out and build up a tool collection. Once you start wrenching more you'll discover what you would like to upgrade and you can go from there.
 

wild cowboy

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Mar 11, 2014
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Birmingham
The 2 Cobra set of pliers marked "Made in Germany". They are Knipex, with different colored handles.

I personally paid more for actual Knipex brand, I can't stomach giving Sears any of my money any more.

everyone always beats up on Sears, and they have done some underhanded stuff, off-shoring some of our "forever warranty" USA made tools, but in their defense, who else has had a no hassle, no questions asked warranty on tools for the last 50 years or more?

beat up on the tool trucks, who charge 8 or 10 times the price for roughly equivalent quality tools and then want to give me flack on the warranty worthiness of my claim .... ugh!
 

Ruger_556

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Dec 8, 2013
Messages
4,005
everyone always beats up on Sears, and they have done some underhanded stuff, off-shoring some of our "forever warranty" USA made tools, but in their defense, who else has had a no hassle, no questions asked warranty on tools for the last 50 years or more?

beat up on the tool trucks, who charge 8 or 10 times the price for roughly equivalent quality tools and then want to give me flack on the warranty worthiness of my claim .... ugh!

For the love of god man... Not every thread on the forum revolves around your warranty problems.
 
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wild cowboy

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I am convinced you are either anti USA or you cannot afford top quality tools built in the USA. You're always dissing great brands in favor of Taiwan. Btw Williams is an industrial rebrand of Snap On, Snap on owns the Williams name. Same with Matco and Armstrong I believe. Craftsman used to make quality American tools but pissed a lot of people off when they started outsourcing to China. Regardless, I believe Craftsman is a cheap cost effective way to start out and build up a tool collection. Once you start wrenching more you'll discover what you would like to upgrade and you can go from there.

I own more USA made tools than any other country, by a wide margin, I am not anti-USA or anti-Taiwan or anti-Germany or anti-Japan - I am pro-quality :bounce:

I have a substantial amount of every tool brand I listed above, and 98% of the time, there isn't didley-squat difference in the quality

right now I am going through tools to return, got some Craftsman (USA) with cracking chrome, got a Snap-On semi-deep FSMS15 socket that sheared using a ratchet, have a Matco (USA) ratcheting wrench that has locked up due to rust and has never been left in the weather, so a few tools of all brands will fail, but 98% of ALL of those I listed above are fine, so I feel bad for the folks who got themselves buried in debt thinking that a certain brand was far better than anything else.

and I am not dissing any brand, but I am finding that the Taiwan stuff is holding up at least as well as the USA stuff, so far, and some of it is 20 years old, so I certainly got my money's worth, 10 fold!

I drive Japanese cars and trucks because they are far more reliable than any other country's cars and trucks, so could you send me some money for parts so I can drive 'murican? :lol_hitti
 
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nicksnothereman

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Joined
Oct 19, 2013
Messages
3,608
Location
In the Mojave
Hey guys as a young guy starting to build up my toolbox I was wondering what you guys thought were some of your favorite craftsman tools available at sears. My sockets and ratchets are all craftsman and so are my wrenches all U.S.A raised panel stock. I've been keeping an eye on the 41 pc. screwdriver set the 3 piece professional pry bar set and a 4 piece plier set but i've also been looking at a few other brands of tools at harry epstein that i'd like to get my hands on. However getting tools at sears is extremely convenient for me so i wanted to know what you guys thought.

Industrial use you probably want some of the armstrong (craftsman industrial) stuff. Don't need it right now though. Other stuff (even chinese) will do fine if you work in a fairly "torque safe" drive (1/2 or 3/4). Don't bother with the large driver set because no one is attached to a single style of screwdriver...no one!:3gears:

Can't comment on the pliers, don't know the duty requirement they'll be used for, I work with far less (kobalt chinese) most of the time. Okay for me not going to be okay for industrial.
 

d.mcfarland

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Jun 18, 2012
Messages
6,583
Location
Western PA
Best bet is to go to nearby stores and look at the far back of the tool stack on the shelf to see if there is NOS USA items that are now China. Use the shop your way rewards program also!
 

cheechi

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Feb 29, 2012
Messages
4,384
Location
Triad, NC
Please explain to me why I start to read a thread, then Wild Cowboy shows up and it turns to ****. Seriously dude get the bent stick out of your *** or stfu.

OP, here is what I would get. Some of it I have, some I'd get if I didn't have that kind. Keep in mind most of my tools are not super high end, some HF, some GW, some cman, a few SO, Knipex, Klein, CL.
Pry bars (mayhew not the solid red handles) especially that 10" that mofo is useful everywhere
thread restorer kit
bolt outs
snap ring pliers (unless you got deep pockets these are the best; the price gap from them to knipex or SO is huge)

Some things you can get but aren't 'soooooo much better' than similar priced options
flare wrenches (get a lot of mixed reviews here, my USA RP ones are fine but not overworked)
hammers
sockets, torx, hex bits, anything you put on a ratchet
wrenches (not the RP's, anything better can be great value on a good sale but regular prices are not a great bargain considering the warranty; this is where you would want to look at SK, Armstrong, etc)

Personally I would avoid most screwdrivers, impact stuff, power tools (some are ok but I can't think of a current one I'd want), pliers, ratchets, specialty ****, etc.
 

kbradley4333

Member
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
23
Location
Jacksonville fl
ive always like the craftsman usa raised panel wrenches, even more than the proffesional line it comes down to what feels best in your hands. what type of work are you looking to do?
 

theoldwizard1

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Feb 22, 2011
Messages
43,275
Location
SE MI
98% of my tools are Craftsman. 90% of my tools are over 25 years old.

Lately I have been buying some "specialty" tools (extra long bent needle nose pliers, small hose grip pliers) and have found acceptable quality and excellent price at HF. Latest addition was a disc brake rewinder kit. Generic Chinese from eBay.
 

zakmartin

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Jul 3, 2012
Messages
620
Location
Seattle, WA
Industrial use you probably want some of the armstrong (craftsman industrial) stuff.

In my experience, Armstrong and Craftsman Industrial are miles apart in terms of overall quality and comfort. Armstrong comes out on top every time. I gave most of my Craftsman Industrial stuff (purchased in a 154 piece kit) away to my nephew. Compared to the Craftsman Professional tools I bought 20 years ago, the Industrial stuff is basically a joke. The first time I picked up a Craftsman Industrial RP "wrench", I said, "You have GOT to be kidding!" :spit:
 

chicane

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May 24, 2007
Messages
553
Location
Central Virginia
Off topic but I would suggest taking a good look at husky, I like the stuff for the price plus the warranty is really good. Considering sears is in deep **** and could go down if they do bad this Christmas from what I have heard,I would be cautious.

Husky is ****. Craftsman will outlive Sears that is not even in doubt. Craftsman is basically a retail brand. Nothing more. They make NOTHING. They produce NOTHING. They simply pick and choose from various tool manufacturers and provide warranty services. As long as they can pick good manufacturers (hopefully US made) and provide warranty services Cman tools could be sold anywhere and for a very long time.
 

66354dream

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Joined
Aug 1, 2013
Messages
1,003
Location
Southern California
I am convinced you are either anti USA or you cannot afford top quality tools built in the USA. You're always dissing great brands in favor of Taiwan. Btw Williams is an industrial rebrand of Snap On, Snap on owns the Williams name. Same with Matco and Armstrong I believe. Craftsman used to make quality American tools but pissed a lot of people off when they started outsourcing to China. Regardless, I believe Craftsman is a cheap cost effective way to start out and build up a tool collection. Once you start wrenching more you'll discover what you would like to upgrade and you can go from there.[/QUOTE

EXACTLY!!!! (except for the first 2 sentences) when I started wrenching I had 95% craftsman stuff, the other 5% I had were mixed brands I had picked up with my employee discounts while working for auto parts chain stores and they ALL served me well until about a year later when I bought my first promo tool set off the Snap On truck, after a while of wrenching you start to realize what better tools will (SO, Matco, mac) actually benefit you, just do some research because some of the tool truck tools are actually just relabeled tools from other manufacturers.
 

jrobb316

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Joined
May 18, 2014
Messages
1,377
Location
WI
I am a pro and have some craftsman. If I was starting out I would buy (USA only [and that's my personal principal]) from craftsman
1) the 20 piece stubby wrench set. Best value anywhere in stubbies. Don't forget to add the 9mm, 21mm and 22mm (yes I use this one all the time). And the 1".
2) the 5 piece PRO prybar set. Same as what's sold on the matco truck for way cheaper.
3) the 299 chrome socket set. I still use cman chromes a lot.
4) a SAE pro/industrial wrench set. Most work is metric for me so I opt for snap on there but for less used SAE the pro wrench set IMO is fantastic.

The pro screwdrivers and torx screwdrivers are good but discontinued. Maybe still available in packages online. I agree with another poster, I'd go channellock for pliers if I did it again.
 
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