rsanter
Well-known member
that ***** because the cman pros were good wrenches
bob
bob
Time to start looking at HF Pittsburgh. Their professional line looks pretty darn good. I wouldn't be surprised if it was the same wrench with just a different name.
They for sure won't be clearanced. The regular and flare crow wrenches that I've seen with the new China offerings are just stacked on top of the existing older stock. Has the same part number.Id say if you look fast and hard you will find some US past models on Clearance. That will be your best bet to pick up some quality on the cheap i would presume.
They for sure won't be clearanced. The regular and flare crow wrenches that I've seen with the new China offerings are just stacked on top of the existing older stock. Has the same part number.
I place the blame on all those who abuse the warrenty...................thanks for ruining one, if not the last great affordable USA made tool.
I place the blame on all those who abuse the warrenty...................thanks for ruining one, if not the last great affordable USA made tool.
... still see the FRAGRANT abuse of any tool and then DEMANDING a warrenty on it as ABUSE of the original implied warrenty. I mean, what happened to common decency and honesty. if you broke it while abusing it, it's your fault, not the company...they don't owe your ****, buy a new one....if it broke under normal use, take it back....to me, it seems many of us have lost morals and are constantly demanding something for nothing
ok, after reading the last 2 post and some carefull thought, i have to rethink my opinion a bit, however, in a way, i still see the FRAGRANT abuse of any tool and then DEMANDING a warrenty on it as ABUSE of the original implied warrenty. I mean, what happened to common decency and honesty. if you broke it while abusing it, it's your fault, not the company...they don't owe your ****, buy a new one....if it broke under normal use, take it back....to me, it seems many of us have lost morals and are constantly demanding something for nothing
The word is flagrant. Fragrant means indicates something smells.
Whats really more unfortunate is that Made In USA doesn't carry the prestige that it once did. Ive been around long enough to remember when It was much easier to find USA built tools than tools from overseas. But I can also tell you this. Back in the day not all tools that had Made In USA stamped on them were good tools. I can show you some made in the USA absolute **** that came out of the 60's, 70's.
It just make me shake my head in disbeleif when I read some of the stuff I do on here about someone buying a set of sockets made in China or anywhere else outside the US is costing American Jobs. Harbor Freight employs more that 7400 workers nationwide. They are the BIGGEST employer in Dillion County SC.(I frequent this store often) It has over a 1,000,000 square foot dist center. They put jobs in an area where 30 other companies have pulled out of in the last 10 years. Despite the products they sell being imported the company is US owned, Is putting food on the table of 7400+ American workers not to mention the related jobs they create such as the truck drivers needed to haul the stuff right on to the dock workers used to unload it.
Whats really more unfortunate is that Made In USA doesn't carry the prestige that it once did. Ive been around long enough to remember when It was much easier to find USA built tools than tools from overseas. But I can also tell you this. Back in the day not all tools that had Made In USA stamped on them were good tools. I can show you some made in the USA absolute **** that came out of the 60's, 70's.
You can't blame the consumer for spend 10 dollars on a China built ratchet where the quality is twice as good a a US model that cost nearly two times as much. You also can't blame the average Joe for spending 10 dollars on a tool that will do the same job as a 100 dollar tool built for a professional technician. The money saved from that one sale can buy other American made goods and services. Saving a few dollars on tools also gives an advantage to some young technicians just getting started not to sell their soul to the tool man. The money he saves can help him buy a home, pay the bills, etc. It's a tough row to hoe out there right now for technicians right now with so many dealerships going under. To blame some guy who saves a few dollars on his tools in order to keep his family fed vs being overwhelmed by 100+ dollar a week tool payment may be the glue that holds that family unit together and keeps the burden off the state because daddy or Mommy got overwhelmed and called it quits and leaves the burden on one parent or keeps the family so broke that they are dependant on the state to feed them.
Bottom line is that Place like Harbor Freight has rescued a town like Dillon SC and kept about 800 people in that area off state assistance. The people that buy there keep those people in a job. It's a ripple effect. Some people don't look at the big picture before getting a case of diareha of the mouth.
let me restate that YES you have to blame the consumer.........
the bottom line is profit. if people refused to buy chinese made good there would be no profit for the company. face it we vote with our wallets and i truly believe the younger generation cares less about american maufacturing than the generations before.
sears tried to go offshore 30 years ago and it was the CONSUMER who stopped it by not purchasing the tools. the bean counters now see people flocking to HF, gearwrench, etc and can see that the consumer now doesn't care about COO anymore all they care about is price point. and thier right.........with few exceptions.
doesn't hold water? craziest thing you've ever heard? think about it for a minute then YOU tell me.............
If Cman were not diluting their quality by the day, people would not care as much if the product is made overseas. Compare a 15 year old 3/8 DR ratchet with a brand new one. The tolerances are tighter on the older one and the older one is much stronger.
I am sick and tired of reading on this forum about how bad the younger generation is for America. We care about Made in USA, but we do not have the means to buy an $80 ratchet or pay $125 for four screwdrivers. We have to maximize our bang for the buck and that means top of the line imported tools. If American companies made a GREAT quality tool at a reasonable price, there would be no reason to buy an imported tool. Read that last line. If an American company made a ratchet as good as the Gearwrench ratchet at the same price point or cheaper, we wouldn't buy the GW one. Go compare a new 44811 Cman to an older one. There is no comparison.
You know why people are flocking to Gearwrench? It is a superior product.
What was the economy like 30 years ago? Hell, what was the country like 30 years ago?
I never knew we had so many English majors on this board.
The bottom line is profit. Although the new Chinese made full polished Professional set lists the same as the US made set ($99.99), I doubt if Sears pays the same per set as they did for the US made sets.
If American companies made a GREAT quality tool at a reasonable price, there would be no reason to buy an imported tool.
i don't think the economy was much different........1980 had high unemplyment and runaway inflation, and it may have been worse than today.
Krusty, your viewpoint simply makes no sense. Craftsman didn't lower their prices to compete with imports, they mysteriously lowered their quality and kept the price the same! Yet you still blame the consumer because he goes for the best value.
It's simple: provide quality and the consumer will buy it. Do you not see that Craftsman's new ratchets ... ****? What incentive is there to purchase one? Heck, if the Taiwan-made HF were more expensive, it would still be the better choice because the Craftsman just doesn't offer value for dollar spent anymore.
let me restate that YES you have to blame the consumer.........
the bottom line is profit. if people refused to buy chinese made good there would be no profit for the company. face it we vote with our wallets and i truly believe the younger generation cares less about american maufacturing than the generations before.
sears tried to go offshore 30 years ago and it was the CONSUMER who stopped it by not purchasing the tools. the bean counters now see people flocking to HF, gearwrench, etc and can see that the consumer now doesn't care about COO anymore all they care about is price point. and thier right.........with few exceptions.
doesn't hold water? craziest thing you've ever heard? think about it for a minute then YOU tell me.............
it doesn't make sense to you because you don't understand it.......value is more than price point. sears has the oportunity to find a higher quality domestic source or a higher quality import source. that decision is thiers to make based on market trends. if the american tool buying cared about COO then sears would be forced to choose another domestic manufacturer or force danaher to a higher standard.Krusty, your viewpoint simply makes no sense. Craftsman didn't lower their prices to compete with imports, they mysteriously lowered their quality and kept the price the same! Yet you still blame the consumer because he goes for the best value.
Yes, but what was the average salary of a factory worker back then, compared with today? I don't know for sure, but I do know that factory workers are paid much better today than in the past.
Do you not see that Craftsman's new ratchets ... ****? What incentive is there to purchase one? Heck, if the Taiwan-made HF were more expensive, it would still be the better choice because the Craftsman just doesn't offer value for dollar spent anymore.
It's laudable to support domestic companies, but this kind of jingoism is the same stuff that enabled Detroit's output of junk for THIRTY YEARS (give or take) and eventually played a significant role in destroying two of the big three. It's incredible that blind brand loyalty kept the three afloat for so long, what a tremendous power that was and they squandered it. Reward a company for selling ever-crumbier products and see what it gets you. Then reward a company that sells ever-improving products. Getting the picture?
Times have changed I am of the age that I can remember when made in the USA ment something to the everyday man.
i think if you factor in inflation you'll find that the american worker makes less today. we have less buying power.
i know that i make about twice what i did in 1980 but consumer prices have tripled.
Do you guys just reserve this Made in America passion for tools and maybe cars? 'Cause that's just a drop in the bucket.