One of the reviews on the Sears site says "84 cents a socket AMAZING". So 84 cents x 299 sockets is $251.16.Sears has their CMan 299 piece "Ultimate" Socket set on sale for $379. Supposedly this has every socket they make in it, so I can quite trying to fill in holes in my sets!
Does this go on sale for less ever that I should hold out for?
Sears has their CMan 299 piece "Ultimate" Socket set on sale for $379. Supposedly this has every socket they make in it, so I can quite trying to fill in holes in my sets!
That's worth holding out for. I signed up for Sears' email alerts on this item but I've never gotten one.
it does go on sale. plus there are coupons you can search google for.
I have this set and love it, but I ordered it several years ago before it became a chinese set.
I've got this set and have bought about 4 of them. I got 2 and used that to sort out missing or mispackaged sockets and then returned the incomplete set. much easier to do it this way than to deal with sears. the other 2 I got for friends. one of those friends got a set that had a mistake (2 sets of 6-pt instead of a 6-pt and 12-pt set) and he could never get sears to take care of the problem.
To me, these are the big questions. Will waiting for the better price, which will probably be around the holidays, result in buying a Chinese set of sockets? Has the set already changed over to Chinese made sockets? And the biggest question, is this set currently a mix of Chinese and US sockets? Has anyone purchased this set recently?
I have bought this set and some of the other sets and only found a few that errors with sockets- Apex was quick t take care of them though, no talking to Sears India to correct these kinds of issues
This set is a good set but I think I picked it up last year or the year before around the $250 price point- it is a lot of sockets but as someone mentioned there are gaps on my Hanson trays where they just don't make certain sizes in 6 or 12 point.
I have bought this set and some of the other sets and only found a few that errors with sockets- Apex was quick t take care of them though, no talking to Sears India to correct these kinds of issues
This set is a good set but I think I picked it up last year or the year before around the $250 price point- it is a lot of sockets but as someone mentioned there are gaps on my Hanson trays where they just don't make certain sizes in 6 or 12 point.
You're not supposed to deal with Sears. You need to call the number on the packing slip. That's APEX tools, and they are good about fixing errors.
I've had good luck with apex when it comes to gearwrench tools. but for craftsman, I'm always told, "you need to take it to your local Sears store and they will take care of you" ... which ultimately turns into the hassle nightmare I try to avoid. might be draw of the luck thing...
To me, these are the big questions. Will waiting for the better price, which will probably be around the holidays, result in buying a Chinese set of sockets? Has the set already changed over to Chinese made sockets? And the biggest question, is this set currently a mix of Chinese and US sockets? Has anyone purchased this set recently?
Did you have the item number of the set?
The only time I've had a problem was when it was a set that's no longer in production, and all I needed then was a salescheck number.
people have various reasons to buy USA, and I respect that. but having recently (2 days ago) seen the Chinese craftsman sockets and owning this 299pc set made in USA, I have to say the finish on the Chinese ones seem of better quality, probably because they don't have restrictions on their chroming industry. of course, visually pleasing says nothing about strength, but then again, I've never known craftsman sockets to be that strong as I've cracked quite a few USA craftsman sockets over the years...
Not just strength or patriotism. I've taken a look at the Chinese sockets in the stores and the walls on the sockets are noticeably a lot thicker than the USA sockets. That makes the Chinese sockets quite a lot less useful to me.
again, not saying anything about strength, since no one has yet done a comparison of USA vs China craftsman sockets to breaking point and measured the forces involved. but, hypothetically, if they are made to the same specifications strength wise (isn't there some ANSI standard for this?), and the China ones are thin walled, wouldn't that be better? i can think of a handful of situations where i wished i had a socket with thinner walls. now, if thin wall compromises strength (which is unknown at this point) then I'd be concerned. otherwise, thin wall is actually an advantage to me... so, if you're concerned about strength due to thin walls, i share the same concern; but then it's about strength. if you're concerned about thin walls as a physical feature, then i don't get it... i would prefer thin walls.
The USA made sockets are the ones with the thin walls. The Chinese sockets are much thicker and less useful to me.
Yeah, I guess I could just buy the Chinese Craftsman sockets and then buy another set with nice thin walls. But honestly, why wouldn't I just buy the set with the nice thin walls that works all the time? It's not strength. I have plenty of thin walled sockets and I'm not breaking them very often at all.
again, not saying anything about strength, since no one has yet done a comparison of USA vs China craftsman sockets to breaking point and measured the forces involved. but, hypothetically, if they are made to the same specifications strength wise (isn't there some ANSI standard for this?),
That's worth holding out for. I signed up for Sears' email alerts on this item but I've never gotten one.
Is there a link to this set? I can't seem to find it online.
Their E-mail alert system has never once worked for me.
I used it a couple times last year, and it worked every time.
Of course, I have no way of being certain it didn't miss once or twice.
How is that "Every socket Craftsman makes?"
Where's the 3/4" stuff? Impacts? etc..
How is that "Every socket Craftsman makes?"
Where's the 3/4" stuff? Impacts? etc..
people have various reasons to buy USA, and I respect that. but having recently (2 days ago) seen the Chinese craftsman sockets and owning this 299pc set made in USA, I have to say the finish on the Chinese ones seem of better quality, probably because they don't have restrictions on their chroming industry. of course, visually pleasing says nothing about strength, but then again, I've never known craftsman sockets to be that strong as I've cracked quite a few USA craftsman sockets over the years...
It may be prettier initially, that doesn't equate to better quality when it comes to rust protection. Talk to me in a couple years of the Chinese sockets sweating in your drawers...