Hi there,
Reviving a dead thread, with a specific GearWrench vs. Craftsman question.
If this should be a new thread, forgive me.
I just bought the 7pc metric X-Beam ratcheting set.
Things that attracted me to this set were:
$79.99
Surface Drive on both open end and box end (drives on flange, so as not to round, and drives rounded fasteners.)
Box end is completely planar with the wrench handle.
7pcs.
I was also considering Craftsman Cross-Force set.
$124.99
Surface Drive (flange drive) not advertised at all, is only present on box end, not open end.
Box end is not planar with the handle, but instead at the usual 170ish degrees angled.
7pcs.
It appeared to me that both GearWrench and Craftsman were Danaher, but the Craftsman warranty does not exclude abuse, and if one part failed, I could bring just that one part back to Sears. The Sears sales guy told me that they'd cover the GearWrench, but that I'd need to bring the whole set, since they don't stock individuals.
I tend to keep tools an awfully long time. I do like the concept of bringing a tool back to Sears and not having a spot of doubt about the replacement.
I can't recall the last time I broke a wrench, although I have replaced some that had chrome flake off.
I do know the last time I broke a ratchet - Sears replaced that one without a moment's thought.
It essentially amounts to $6 more a wrench for the Craftsman label and warranty, without the surface-drive on the open-end, angled box-end, and a pawl instead of pawl-less design.
So, the questions are:
(1) Does anyone think I made the wrong decision for the additional $45?
(2) Does anyone think the surface drive on the open end is a bad decision (marrs fasteners?)
(3) Does anyone think that the box-end angle is better than having it be completely flat with the handle?
(4) Does anyone have a feeling about the pawl-less GearWrench vs. the reversible Craftsman?
I should probably have asked all these questions before I bought, but I didn't find this place until after.