The difference in head thickness compared to the dual 80 is barely noticeable at all
We set out to build a flagship ratchet for the Craftsman brand...and I think we succeeded. These feel great, look great, and perform fantastically. I am very excited to see them hit the market after 3 years of development, and look forward to feedback from the community. The sealed head and handle are the key features, and I can guarantee that each and every part in these ratchets, down to the hang-card they come on, is made in the USA.
-C
Looks nice but price seems high. I'd rather just spend a few more bucks for Snap On
I can see where somebody may rather spend 20 more dollars for a Snap-On just for the name. One problem I have with Snap-On is they no longer mark ratchets USA. If the USA marking offends foreign buyers then they shouldn't buy them and Snap-On should be proud to mark the USA unless there is a leagal reason they can't like the internals are made in China. If you don't get bogged down in the prestige of the name it looks like a great tool equal if not better than the dual 80. If you have a tool truck coming by every week it may be to the advantage to spend the extra 20 on the Snap-On, if you don't have a tool truck the Craftsman may be the better alternative.
Holy cow, that really is SnapOn territory. I can't think of a single reason I'd want to deal with Sears over SnapOn. If they're behind a display case, that means you've still got to track down a salesperson to even try one. Unfortunately for Sears, tracking down my local SnapOn guy is way easier than tracking down a Sears salesdroid. What happens if the local store decides to stop stocking them and I need a warranty replacement? There goes that benefit.
That said, I'm most disappointed that Sears is choosing to pursue the high end stuff. They've had the Craftsman Pro line. It was decent, it served a niche. What Craftsman has been ignoring is the value stuff. The quality just evaporated from the non-Pro line. How about instead of yet another variant on higher end stuff, focusing on quality *value* products. For example: the raised panel ratchet garbage.
Holy cow, that really is SnapOn territory. I can't think of a single reason I'd want to deal with Sears over SnapOn.
Interesting you mention that about the chrome as I have an old Proto LA extension which I evaporusted and to my amazement found copper plating under all the rust. I never imagined that tools would be triple plated. Nothing like quality vintage American tools.
Snap-On still uses about the best chrome process in the business. They use Nickel Chrome. Very durable. I'm not a big fan of the old ratchets. The heads are so big it's like using a brick on a broomstick

Holy cow, that really is SnapOn territory. I can't think of a single reason I'd want to deal with Sears over SnapOn. If they're behind a display case, that means you've still got to track down a salesperson to even try one. Unfortunately for Sears, tracking down my local SnapOn guy is way easier than tracking down a Sears salesdroid. What happens if the local store decides to stop stocking them and I need a warranty replacement? There goes that benefit.
That said, I'm most disappointed that Sears is choosing to pursue the high end stuff. They've had the Craftsman Pro line. It was decent, it served a niche. What Craftsman has been ignoring is the value stuff. The quality just evaporated from the non-Pro line. How about instead of yet another variant on higher end stuff, focusing on quality *value* products. For example: the raised panel ratchet garbage.
Somehow I don't see this as a learning from past mistakes thing. Instead of Craftsman being a reasonable quality American made tool brand, we've now got two levels of Chinese garbage under the Craftsman umbrella and a new super premium Craftsman brand... that will stay not third world made for how long?
I dont see how anyone could be dissapointed that Sears if offering a USA made quality product! I wish they would pull all the cheap Chinese overpriced stuff off the shelves or re-price it at its true value. The Sears closest to me has a couple of gals that have been there for several years and know their stuff. Good customer service is at Sears is a non-issue for me. Lets just wait and see if they stock these ratchets or if I will have to order them.
Why? Because they're competing (or trying to) with SnapOn. Danaher already has Matco for that. Instead of selling good, better, best. Sears is selling ****, crappier, and best.
And, yeah, for a truck premium I'd expect premium service. If the stores don't get in the habit of stocking them, and warranty exchanges/repairs become an issue... yeah.
Craftsman "Premium":
1/4" drive - $50
3/8" drive - $60
1/2" drive - $80
These are all so-called long handles, but the specs are missing so who knows how long.
SnapOn Dual 80s normal handle:
1/4" T72 (4 7/16") - $66 ($16 diff)
3/8" F80 (7 11/32") - $80 ($20 diff)
1/2" S80 (10 5/16") - $140 ($60 diff)
Long handle:
1/4" TL72 (6.5") - $75 ($25 diff)
3/8" FL80 (10 5/16") - $90 ($30 diff)
1/2" SL80 (15") - $143 ($60 diff)
So, yeah. $120 diff if you go with the long SO ratchets. Or, if you go with the standard length SO ratchets, you're talking a hair less than $100 more than the CMan ratchets. The ball buster here is the SO 1/2" ratchet.
If you skip the S80/SL80, you can then go to Amazon and get an SK Tuff1 1/2" for $40, and you've got three proven, quality, American made ratchets for, what, half of what Sears wants? This would leave you with a net savings of $4 if you're after the standard length ratchets, and pare the premium down to $15 for the long handles. That *is* chump change. The Craftsman price point just doesn't do anything for me.
As for Danaher, sure, they don't own Craftsman. But what they're providing Craftsman is a commodity product, which leaves service and price as the main selling point over the Matco/Armstrong/whatever equivalents. Sears has taken a premium Danaher ratchet, and is selling it at a premium price. It doesn't sound much like a recipe for success. If you're worried about the tool truck showing up, you can always mail in warranty claims. Is that going to be much slower than Sears' sometimes lethargic shipping?
That said, how long will it be before Sears realizes that they're expensive to make and either discontinues them (leaving you SOL for replacement parts) or cheapens them to the extent they have with the raised panel ratchets? Prices on the RPs haven't dropped, but the quality tanked. When's the last time you saw SnapOn cheapen their ratchets to such a large extent?
Hell, what happened to the so-called Professional Craftsman line?
The long and the short of it is that Sears has a reputation for cheap (and previously quality) products. How much of their target market is really interested in dropping SnapOn prices for Craftsman quality?
I don't get why the handle is so completely smooth, there is no knurling, nothing at all. They could cut "craftsman" into the handle, or the patent number, like they usually do.
Buy some if you're interested or not. Buy what you want.
blarf said:And, yeah, for a truck premium I'd expect premium service. If the stores don't get in the habit of stocking them, and warranty exchanges/repairs become an issue... yeah.
blarf said:If you skip the S80/SL80, you can then go to Amazon and get an SK Tuff1 1/2" for $40, and you've got three proven, quality, American made ratchets for, what, half of what Sears wants?

Snap on is NOT the standard everything is measured against.:
I would have to respectfully disagree. QUOTE]
It's ok.Everyone has an opinion. I feel Snap on is not as good as it once was. I own a lot of Snap on but, I seem to be disappointed in my recent purchases from them. Besides comparing Craftsman to Snap on is like comparing a VW to a Porsche.
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I have to say it's actually entertaining to sit here and read all these comments about the quality, service, etc. of these ratchets and as of right now only one person has purchased one. Gotta love the internet! I intend on getting at least one but I'm going to wait for a decent sale because I refuse to pay MSRP for anything. Until I purchase mine, receive it and use it, I will not comment on them other than to say they look nice from the photos I've seen.
Re-read what you quoted me on. I said "....and as of right now only one person has purchased one". I don't see how I made an oversight.