This is actually a great thread idea. Lots of bickering and strong ideals exist on both sides, and it's nice to see personal perspectives.
To start in the way those before me did; as a young kid, I too helped my father repair our cars (mostly American at first), do basic home repairs, and attempt to install ceiling fans. Most of my memories involve being screamed at, nervously holding a D-cell flashlight in the general direction of what I thought we were working on, and not having the right tools. About 75% US, mostly craftsman, then some Chinese and Taiwanese making up the rest. Problem was, we rarely actually could just tackle a job. First we would attempt to remove a rusty metric bolt with a 12-point SAE socket. I learned the right tool was always worth the price.
This theme of ALWAYS having the right tool, or something close, is now my #1 philosophy. I still use some 3/8s sockets from my first tool set, a 150-ish piece craftsman set, yes, it was USA. I've lost a few over the years, replaced with other brands at random. I have 6 or so brands between 6 and 19. On the craftsman topic, I never was all that impressed in general. I vastly prefer my Sunex combo wrenches to my US craftsmans.
Anyways, COO is basically irrelevant to me. I love Taiwan, thanks to brands like sunex and GW; gives me a LOT of variety and buying power. For instance, in 3/8 drive, I have shallow, semi-deep, and deep, all 3 types in both impact and chrome. Some are snap-on, some parts-store generic, some GW, some sunex, some matco..... It's on a taiwanese tray too, works as well as any US tray I've seen. Matco/Mac have really gotten on my **** list, because if I'm buying Taiwan, I'm supposed to be saving money. Snap On I'm currently aggravated with. A string of slow warranty claims (dealer was having health issues, not his fault, no ill-will) followed by his retirement, and now no dealer. I have $250 worth of busted snap on stuff that is making me $0. I buy from brands I trust. I buy cheap versions first, then upgrade later if/when the tool re-pays itself. I'm a mechanic, every day, 55+ hours a week. It can be stressful. I don't need debt adding to that stress. I use my HF impact sockets literally every day. In 5 years of daily shop use, I broke 1. I used another socket to finish the job, and since I spit the socket with a 6-foot cheater bar, I don't blame poor quality.
tl;dr - I love my tools, and don't care where they come from. USA can ****, any country can make a ****** design or have a poor production run. Basic common sense while looking at things like casting quality, ratchet mechanism free-play, etc. will usually prevent buying bad tools.
Tools are like women, every nation has at least one good example. Seriously though, where can I find some red-headed tools?
