Sometime late 70s buck bros took a nosedive. Very good chisels before that, but anything with that name in the last few decades is stuff I would leave in the free box at a garage sale
Exactly. It was around 1978. Older Buck Bros. chisels were excellent tools.
The trouble is, just saying a name doesn't always tell the whole story. A lot of brands took a nosedive in the 1970s, and a lot of brands took a nosedive when they were sold to a new owner, and a lot of brands mentioned had more than one line or quality level of tools. If all you've ever experienced is a brand's low end or homeowner level of tools, you'll give the whole name a bad rap that it may not entirely deserve.
I'm surprised no one has mentioned
Black & Decker yet, or if they did, I missed it. At one time, Black & Decker made industrial/commercial quality tools that rivaled any brand anywhere. But then they diluted the brand name with homeowner-grade junk, beginning in the 1960s.
Globemaster wasn't universally bad, but most of it wasn't very good. It wasn't meant to be good; it was just meant to be cheap. Globemaster tools were made in several countries. The ones made in Spain were generally better than the ones made elsewhere.
Indestro and
Durochrome (same ownership) made some excellent tools at one time. They also made some cheap ****, especially under the Indestro name.
Stanley, including
Stanley Handyman, also made good tools along with the bad. Stanley power tools made from the 1930s to 1980 were among the best anywhere. Same for Stanley hand tools made from the 1860s to the 1960s.
Millers Falls was once a very respectable American brand. Now it's just a name used on nothing but import junk. They also made a very respectable line of portable power tools until 1980.
The current
Rockwell-branded tools are import junk, and have absolutely nothing to do with the Rockwell brand of power tools made from 1960 to 1981 and machine tools made from 1946 to 1984. But even then, the original Rockwell diluted their own industrial brand name with homeowner-grade low-priced junk.
Fuller is another brand that has mostly been low-end and low-priced, but some of their older tools were marginally OK.
Thorsen tools made before the late-60s were very good tools.
Giller was under the same ownership as Thorsen, and a lot of Giller tools were just Thorsen re-brands.
S-K tools made during the era when they were owned by Facom were nothing compared to earlier S-K and current S-K. Facom nearly killed the brand.
Skil made some of the best industrial-grade tools before the 1990s, but they also used the name on cheap tools.
Happy Home was a dime-store brand (Woolworth's) along the same lines as Globemaster. Not universally bad, but not very good either. Anybody younger than 40 has probably never seen a Happy Home tool and probably never will.
Older
Penncraft (J.C. Penney) tools were very decent, mainly prior to the 1970s.
Barcalo-Buffalo were once decent tools too, a very long time ago. There was a Buffalo brand of machine tools that was also very good.
Great Neck was never meant to be a quality brand; it was always a low-priced homeowner brand. Now it's even worse, because the name is owned by the same Chinese company that owns the Millers Falls name.
Other names to avoid,
Chicago Electric,
Pittsburgh....
