To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Newer SK adjustable wrenches USA made?

Sanny81

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 26, 2015
Messages
558
Location
New Jersey
CA36249E-A2EA-41A4-B54B-08E850894D90.jpeg
I recently bought one of these from Amazon and when it arrived noticed there’s no USA markings. Not a big deal but now I’m just curious, are there now non-USA made SK?
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Fedwrench

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 9, 2007
Messages
14,954
Location
Valley of the sun
where have you guys been? :wtf: There are several threads and much knashing of teeth over the new Great Star owned SK.

SK is now rebadged Duratech tools from the PRC for the most part. I never ever envisioned that happening to SK but, it has.

SK speaks of different lines, some being US made but, I think it's smoke and mirrors.
 

dnschmidt

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2014
Messages
7,277
Location
Phoenix, AZ
How does one determine that any adjustable wrench is "cheap to me." from a catalog picture? I get my adjustable wrenches from TOPTUL, for obvious reasons, and they work fine but look like every other adjustable wrench ever made. Now with women on the other hand, as Rod Stewart sang, "Every Picture Tells a Story."
 

Zewnten

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2017
Messages
1,816
How does one determine that any adjustable wrench is "cheap to me." from a catalog picture? I get my adjustable wrenches from TOPTUL, for obvious reasons, and they work fine but look like every other adjustable wrench ever made. Now with women on the other hand, as Rod Stewart sang, "Every Picture Tells a Story."
If it's clearly a CGI picture I don't hold my breath on the quality of the tool.
 

dnschmidt

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2014
Messages
7,277
Location
Phoenix, AZ
Just look at the thing, Denny. Put your glasses on. Geez.
Nut, I've had Lasik and have 20/20 vision. But, I don't have X-ray vision. That picture looks like an adjustable wrench to me. S-K's, to me, lame *** ratcheting wrenches have the same holes in them and nobody complained about that. If a ratcheting wrench isn't reversible it's dogshit is my view. We waited three years for S-K to introduce their ratcheting wrench from it's introduction at SEMA. Why anybody considers this outfit worth their concern is a mystery to me.
 

Kuma601

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 24, 2020
Messages
960
Location
Cali
Disappointing yet expected outcome for S-K.
I've been pleased with the IREGA/Channellock brand.

The top of the beam was a bit coarse so went over it with an A-65/220 grit finish.
wrench-finish-November 16, 2012-0219 - Copy.jpgwrench-finish-November 16, 2012-0221 - Copy.jpg

There is SO:
 

AJHD

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2020
Messages
3,024
Location
AZ
Made in Spain by/for Bahco. They are fantastic adjustables.

Absolutely agree. I have 4 of them, including the wide jaw 12". I wish they made 15" or larger. But I use them constantly. Expensive, but worth every dollar.

Can't speak to S-K, but I've noticed the cheaper wrenches have terrible build quality (fit, finish, rough machining) and/or excessive slop in the head. Also soft metal deforms under pressure.

On the cheaper side, I found the Doyle to be decent for the price. Better than the Pittsburgh offering for sure. I like the Milwaukee (I have the 12" and 15"), but they are a bit expensive. The Husky and Crescent brand are terrible.
 

ihateminimumwage

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2012
Messages
3,960
Absolutely agree. I have 4 of them, including the wide jaw 12". I wish they made 15" or larger. But I use them constantly. Expensive, but worth every dollar.
Same here; The 12" wide jaw has been awesome for hydraulic and large fuel fittings. Have that and the 8" wide mouth and 6" wide mouth slim jaw that now lives in my pocket while working.
 

Brett in KS

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2009
Messages
40
I bought a couple of the channellock and the 8”, 10”, & 12” Carlyle adjustable wrenches last month. I’m really liking the Carlyle. They feel good and the jaws are tighter than the channellock. They were about $5-8 higher, but worth it.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

VolvoRyan

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2019
Messages
1,339
Location
Kentuckiana, USA
There are eleventy eight billion good, solid American made adjustable wrenches on garage sale table and in pawn shops all over the world. Who the hell keeps buying junky new ones?

As always, used tools are hit or miss. I've some awesome USA-Blue-Point ones from the 1970's that have loads of life left in them after decades doing flat rate. Similarly, I have some properly old-school (and collectable) USA adjustables that are kinda junk in practice.

It's a drag, but not surprising that these SK adjustables are super generic imports. When SK was making them in the US, they were super generic Western Forge tools. Problem/blame here isn't SK or Great Star, but the all-American company Ideal, who shuttered Western Forge.

Getting around the Western Forge problem has been the elephant in the room since before the sale of SK was announced.

-Ryan
 

neophyte

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 23, 2012
Messages
9,673
Location
Pennsylvannia
Is there a purpose for an adjustable wrench now that the Pliers Wrench has been invented. I can't think of any.
Yes.
“Squooshy” plumbing fittings.
The Plier Wrench only adjusts in ranges.
Crappy chrome plated zinc fittings, and plastic fittings are way less stiff than brass, iron, or steel fittings.
If you try using a Knipex or similar Plier Wrench on these squooshy fittings, the Plier wrench will squeeze the fitting, making the fitting much harder to turn.
A set screw to fine tune the exact haw opening when closed would fix the issue, but I haven’t felt like drilling and tapping a $50+ pair of pliers yet.
Regular adjustable wrenches don’t squeeze the fastener, so they don’t have the same issue.
 

dr_clyde

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 7, 2009
Messages
6,444
Location
Holland, MI
Is there a purpose for an adjustable wrench now that the Pliers Wrench has been invented. I can't think of any.
I've yet to find a pliers wrench that works as well as my 18" and 24" adjustables on large fasteners. They just don't go big enough.

I also find adjustable wrenches superior to the pliers wrench for any job that requires a large amount of leverage, a cheater pipe or more torque than your grip strength. Sometimes I can wedge the adjustable between the fastener/union/whatever and the wall or table and the wrench holds itself so I can pull with both hands on the other wrench. Can't do that with a pliers wrench.

There's a hole on most adjustables that allow me to hang the wrench on a dedicated machine. I have a wrench on most every machine that uses strap clamps or some kind of hex fitting, most of them hang on a hook.

Adjustable wrenches are also awesome for bending and straightening sheet metal parts and shapes.

In a pinch, you can use an adjustable as a hammer. They make mining wrenches with a hammer head built in for this express purpose.

Pliers wrenches are nifty tools, but they're more suited to smaller fasteners that don't take a lot of gronk.
 

liliysdad

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 18, 2008
Messages
5,394
As always, used tools are hit or miss. I've some awesome USA-Blue-Point ones from the 1970's that have loads of life left in them after decades doing flat rate. Similarly, I have some properly old-school (and collectable) USA adjustables that are kinda junk in practice.


-Ryan
I have piles of adjustable Crescent, Williams, and Diamond adjustable wrenches in drawers, hanging on pegs, and in truck toolboxes that work just fine. Nearly all of them are like new, and few, if any, cost more than a couple of dollars.

You are correct, however, that there are scads of "quality" American made wrenches that just plain ****.
 

dnschmidt

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2014
Messages
7,277
Location
Phoenix, AZ
I've yet to find a pliers wrench that works as well as my 18" and 24" adjustables on large fasteners. They just don't go big enough.

I also find adjustable wrenches superior to the pliers wrench for any job that requires a large amount of leverage, a cheater pipe or more torque than your grip strength. Sometimes I can wedge the adjustable between the fastener/union/whatever and the wall or table and the wrench holds itself so I can pull with both hands on the other wrench. Can't do that with a pliers wrench.

There's a hole on most adjustables that allow me to hang the wrench on a dedicated machine. I have a wrench on most every machine that uses strap clamps or some kind of hex fitting, most of them hang on a hook.

Adjustable wrenches are also awesome for bending and straightening sheet metal parts and shapes.

In a pinch, you can use an adjustable as a hammer. They make mining wrenches with a hammer head built in for this express purpose.

Pliers wrenches are nifty tools, but they're more suited to smaller fasteners that don't take a lot of gronk.
OK, you've got me there. I've never worked on anything that required me to hang on a wrench with a cheater pipe. My 400 mm Pliers Wrench is more than big enough to handle anything I've ever encountered in my garage or home. You Paul Bunyan types working the oil fields, coal mines and places like that could use them I'm sure. Somebody has just made a post asking where he can buy a 24" adjustable wrench. I'm pretty sure that wouldn't fit in either my Toyota or Porsche.
 

liliysdad

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 18, 2008
Messages
5,394
I use my 24” Adjustable and 36” pipe wrenches all the time in my home shop….often with a cheater on them.

Hitch balls are a prime target.
 

Wyoming09

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 24, 2014
Messages
522
Location
Wyoming, MI
......

On the cheaper side, I found the Doyle to be decent for the price. Better than the Pittsburgh offering for sure. I like the Milwaukee (I have the 12" and 15"), but they are a bit expensive. The Husky and Crescent brand are terrible.
I have a couple of pair of the Doyle from Harbor Freight for about 3-4 years. They really surprise me. Holding up very well.
 

Bubba Fett

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2018
Messages
1,516
Location
Eastern NC
The Snap-on ADxC series adjustables are made in USA.
They may be the only current domestic manufacturer of a standard pattern wrench.
AD10C.jpg
I'm wondering if they are currnelty made in USA, or if Snap-on stocked up on domestically-sourced wrenches while they still could.
 

CHI_Tool&Die

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2021
Messages
1,386
Location
Chicago, IL
SK doesn't even have a wrench that looks like that on their website. https://sktools.com/collections/wrenches-sets/adjustable I know they were bought out a while back, but I recall an article or video (can't remember which) that said SK is still making tools here in the US.
Yeah it’s been confirmed by numerous people that SK Professional Tools will be their MiUSA line and consist of sockets and ratchets. They’ll also have a Chinese-made line and I think that is what is confusing people. I hope this doesn’t turn into a Snap-On is owned by HF and makes all their tools in China rumor thing for SK.
 

ecotec

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
5,444
I have been gathering tools like a Magpie for last 30 years… I have the majority of what I will ever need or have the space to store. I still have 22 individual sockets and a few sets on my list…

At one time… I went to Lowe’s and bought about 10 Non-USA Craftsman and filled spots on some trays… I have to admit that I resent looking at them. I will always know that I was in such a hurry to fill those spots… I wish that I had slowly sourced vintage USA onesie twosie… what was the hurry?

I did buy 2 16mm 1/4” drive shallow sockets from SK. Everything else was NOS or used. SK has gotten less than $20 of my money ever. If you are in the Midwest and have time to search, there is tonnage of SK for very little. I have probably had about 15 sets of NOS SK… most went onto socket trays… but I still have a few examples of NOS SK. I am aware that location and having two stores that have NOS SK in close proximity to my house is not a universal experience.

Duro-Indestro is the same way. I find it often NOS still in the Cellophane and cheap. Cheaper than Harbor Freight… but I would argue that the Harbor Freight are technically better sockets. The Duro-Indestro was made in USA and stamped accordingly… so only you can decide what is better…

I bought three SK extensions yesterday. 100% of the money went to Americans…
 

Attachments

  • 19FBEF8F-0E51-448E-A434-C35C94AF3E82.jpeg
    19FBEF8F-0E51-448E-A434-C35C94AF3E82.jpeg
    980.2 KB · Views: 43
  • F342B15D-95F2-4747-B968-864624C53B11.jpeg
    F342B15D-95F2-4747-B968-864624C53B11.jpeg
    921.4 KB · Views: 40

ecotec

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
5,444
For more than twenty years, when I was younger, you could walk into Kitts Industrial and buy this set of deep 1/4” metric for between $12 and $15… I have had about 4 of these sets, and should have bought every set they had with no rust. Kitts Industrial is one of my two favorite local stores for NOS treasure hunting.

It was all made by union workers in the Midwest and France.

Mike Kitts still has some Facom era NOS SK, but nowhere near what he used to have. It is on the shelf above the Grey Pneumatic.
 

Attachments

  • 11A19383-1733-4EAC-8D75-231C55AB9813.jpeg
    11A19383-1733-4EAC-8D75-231C55AB9813.jpeg
    1,009.8 KB · Views: 46
  • EE307329-8450-498D-BDB5-AD59F5174760.jpeg
    EE307329-8450-498D-BDB5-AD59F5174760.jpeg
    1.2 MB · Views: 39
Last edited:

lardy1

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 17, 2019
Messages
3,401
Location
Michigan
There would be a GIANT American flag on that packaging if that was the case (and forged indicator)

I don't bet much, but I'd put a wad on NOT USA
Yes. I posted in haste. After I posted that I enlarged all the pictures in the listing and saw no evidence of Made In USA. Wishful thinking on my part, I suppose.

:beer::beer:
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom