I jest, obviously, but hopefully you see the point I'm trying to make, i.e. your argument cuts both ways.
Yeah yeah, I get it, ha ha. I just reject the assertion that "China" is inherently a deal breaker that should "set me straight". As has been pointed out before...lots of great products are manufactured in China...and at the same time, complete **** gets manufactured in the United States. I'd like to see things manufactured here, but it's not a guarantee of quality.
gatewaysysop said:
It's not a bad looking tool and an interesting design, but the premium is high.
Well okay, but compared to what? That EZ-RED ratcheting line wrench set (EZ-RED is made in China, isn't it?) is selling for $25 per wrench at Sears, compared to $11 per wrench here. Even if you split that (as the EZ-RED wrenches have two ratcheting ends instead of one ratcheting and one fixed) it's still more than the Ratchet Tech.
gatewaysysop said:
If it was manufactured in the US, I'd feel better about supporting it and having something unique for my efforts if the funding succeeded.
I keep seeing people saying "this isn't new" and I've seen a number of similar products, but I've yet to see anybody actually post a link to a product that actually operates like this one. So far, I don't see why this isn't "unique".
And like I said...while I'd love to support US manufacturing, the kind of heavy industry that these products require is prohibitively difficult to start up in the United States, particularly for somebody operating on a small scale. If we insist on US manufacturing, we're probably going to be limiting ourselves to the products that the big, established manufacturers are willing to put out.
gatewaysysop said:
China isn't generally associated with quality tools and until that changes, it's unrealistic to expect people to pay a premium for them.
They've certainly demonstrated that they're capable of manufacturing to high specification and quality levels in other markets, and they even make some tools perfectly well to the satisfaction of the big brands, including the tool truck brands. But if the people who buy high quality tools insist "China tools are always cheap ****, so I'll only ever pay cheap **** prices for anything that says 'China' on it," then it's probably going to be a self fulfilling prophecy. China will just build more and more cheap **** if that's all we're willing to pay for.
ΔΔΔΔ x2
I think that xenophobic comment is BS!
What do you call it if people automatically refuse to consider a product based on COO, to the exclusion of all other factors? I read this kind of stuff every day on here.
mvptrukin said:
1) I think the design is nothing new, SO and others make what I call a claw wrench for flare nut type apps.
Any idea what Snap-On calls it? Because I can't find anything of the sort on their website.
mvptrukin said:
2) other mfg. moved production overseas but I don't recall them hitting up people for startup funds.
Obviously these guys aren't moving production from the US to China, they're starting from scratch, hence the need for startup funds. And if they were asking for donations, sure I wouldn't give them a second look, but they're actually giving people the tools that the startup funds are for.
mvptrukin said:
3) their whole spiel begins with---you will be helping a struggling American family-- did they ask Wilde to see if they could make the tool in KS?
I don't know, maybe e-mail them and find out if it makes such a difference?
Isn't there something similar to Godwin's Law that states "the more GJ'ers talk about Chinese tools, the more likely someone will use touchy-feely liberal buzzwords"?

I think you're about the first person to ever accuse me of anything involving the word "liberal"...