GoBlue
Well-known member
They need only look at the ruins of Detroit
Do I believe it was touted in 1932? Of course.Do you really believe all that? Especially the part about the sailor? I mean does the average sailor really know much about how long ships are supposed to last? If it had been a ship builder and admiral then yeah I could buy that, but asking a simple sailor. That's like asking a basic filing clerk at your office about the whole business operation. No one person knows everything about their company. Co'mon.
By the way there are a great many vintage hand tools still being used today without many of their users even knowing or caring how old they are. I once visited about 10 years ago a light fixture refurbishing shops and they had tools and a bench vise that looked to me to be from the 1920's.
The workshop on my wifes families horse ranch still had an old tool-steel plain finished 12" Diamond Calk Horse Shoe Co adjustable wrench hanging on the back wall along with other tools. From my observation that adjustable wrench is one of the earliest of the Diamond adjustable probably from the 1920's and it still gets used regularly to this day. When I first visited that ranch in the late 1950's a ranch-hand told me that wrench had been there as long as he can recall and he'd worked for the family for over 20 years by that time. I only asked about it because at the time I had the same wrench but mine was bought new in 1955![]()
Do I believe it was touted in 1932? Of course.
Do I believe a sailor said that? Have no idea. Even if it was 100% fabricated, it is none the less proof the idea existed, even if it was not practiced.
We can name off 50 varieties of vintage tools that have lasted the test of time. Why? Because they are the ones that lasted. There were other forgotten product examples. Just because they cannot be recalled, doesn't deny their existence.
Forget about only tools, the concept applies to the entire mfg sector, quite a diverse grouping.
In highly advancing fields like automobiles or computers, the philosophy may be applied because they know there is no demand for the product to last longer than __years, because even if it did, it would be outdated. (just as in the ship quote, regardless if the ship was actually built in such a manner) They know the cost to keep the "item on the road" for such an extended period of time is much more than the consumer desires to pay.
It is NOT a new concept. Only thing new is how many choose to practice it...
Read up some more on early 20th century advancements/business philosophies in mass production, it is quite an interesting read for you and me.
I would think that Estwing and Vaughan could just say "No" to Home Depot, for a few reasons.
One, they both have long histories of producing quality tools. When I want a construction hammer, I buy Estwing or Vaughan. Same as my father and grandfather. If my local retailer doesn't have it, I shop elsewhere. I'm certain I'm not alone. I won't buy a low-grade hammer I know I'm going to use a lot, and neither will any contractor that makes his/her living swinging a hammer. Let Home Depot sell ****; that battle was lost a long time ago and neither Estwing nor Vaughan has the penny-pinching homeowner crowd when a less-than-half-price crummy hammer is next to them on the rack. And they shouldn't need that crowd to survive. Snap-On, Festool and many others do just fine without that crowd. And in their areas, Estwing and Vaughan are at that level of quality. If you want to keep selling to Home Depot, at their price point, fine... but only if you're making a profit. If they don't need you to make a profit, and/or want you to destroy your good name, you don't need them.
That comes to the second reason: it's 2011... embrace direct online sales at reasonable prices and ditch the superstores that want to run/ruin your business. Cut a deal with FedEx instead of Home Depot. If the middleman is a jerk, cut him out of the equation. The market for quality tools will remain. Sell direct, sell to the reasonable online retailers, sell to McMaster-Carr, sell to ACE Hardware, etc.
As a general rule I don't think of Home Depot as a source of quality tools; I think of them as a source of emergency tools. It's rare that I consider an Estwing or a Vaughan an emergency tool. Why? Because it'll last darn near forever. I don't need to rush out and buy a replacement because they never break. If it gets stolen or lost, or the bulldozer runs over my California Framer, offer me the option of buying direct online and overnight shipping. I'll pay for it, as will most contractors. A hammer I can't count on day in and day out costs more than overnight shipping of a quality hammer.
It doesn't cost much to ship a rip hammer. And just as an example, an Estwing 20 oz. rip hammer would be very difficult to destroy, even for UPS. Mine is 30 years old, was used for years to make a living, and has been my go-to hammer ever since. It's still fully functional.
I ordered a set of 5 Estwing ball-peen hammers as a gift last year, and while they weren't packed very well, they arrived in perfect condition. UPS Ground shipping was around $12. I would think both Vaughan and Estwing could move a considerable amount of product via direct sales. Maybe enough to be able to tell Home Depot to shop elsewhere.
Jori, that is pretty disappointing. I sure hope Ridgid keeps making their pipe wrenches in the US (not far from me in Cleveland actually)
Moody Tool got bought by Central Tool. Looks like a good fit to me. Two US companies located in Rhode Island. I'd never heard of Central. Anyone have any experience with their US made lights or precision measuring equipment?
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