Making an SK product in the US is what this thread was about.
Your summary sounds like SK was destined to be right exactly where it is at today.
The major issue, and the issue that currently exists after the purchase by GreatStar, is likely having to move the factory, and restart production in a completely new location, with mostly new workers.
Stanley decades ago tried to consolidate a few different MAC Tools production facilities into a single location.
Tools were stockpiled to facilitate supply during the disruption of the move.
Not enough tools were stockpiled though, and MAC ran out of inventory, or in some cases, took on new MAC dealers, before the new combined production were completed.
The new facilities took way longer to complete than anticipated, resulting in tool stocks running out, so dealers couldn’t get inventory.
MAC got sued, snd there used to be a website called “MacToolsSucks”, or something similar listing all the problems.
Bad managerial decisions were part of the issue, but the main issues came about because of the production move.
I’m not sure that MAC Tools even now has the market share they once did.
The nain reason MAC still exists is because Stanley wanted to keep the brand, and Stanley has pockets that are deeper than most corporations, and possibly because they have other tool production facilities.
A production facility consolidation and move was tried with Armstrong Tools, and very little production actually managed to get set up.
That again took way longer than was expected, with numerous issues turning up with equipment and the new facility site, and the facility basically got shut down and the Armstrong brand killed off, until Apex brought the Armstrong brand back with imported tools to keep the trademark.
With SK, after the manager buyout and bankruptcy, Ideal basically had to setup a completely new facility to make tools the operations they also owned were not familiar with making.
They were still having issues making sockets properly near the end when Ideal sold the brand off, or that was the information I got.
It also took Ideal way longer to get tools into production after setting up the facility than they thought it would.
GreatStar is now supposedly having issues getting new US production up and running, after moving the SK production facility to a completely new state, to a manufacturing facility that was not making hardline tools before.
The other SK tools that are in production seem to just be from facilities that were already making similar tools, just now with SK branding.
The issue doesn’t seem to be “making tools in the USA” but setting up completely new production facilities in the USA, to manufacture tools in large quantities.
Stanley’s new Craftsman facility just ran into the same issue of trying to set up a completely new production facility, and having things take way longer than planned, resulting in failure and shuttering of the facility.
SK could have just purchased cheap tools from Taiwan or China way back when, and had them branded SK, but plenty of other brands have done the same and disappeared, so it is not a full proof method, especially if a brand was known for being made in the USA.