in the '90s? Brother that's a hella long time ago. Most Ryobi power tools are decent for the price, but they will never be professional tools, and they sure don't market them as professional.Bought a Ryobi knock-off of a Dremel hoping for a better moto-tool in the 90's, it was cheaper and I was willing to take the chance. I found it to be a POS and all tools from Ryobi sound/feel like they have not improved the design/build quality. I refuse to purchase anything made by them until proven otherwise.
FYI if you watched the actual video...Ryobi previously listed local Home Depot as the authorized return center....After the purchase, RYBOBI de-authorized Home Depot [the entire chain] as authorized return points.So the guy got a free tool and didn't have to send back the broken one. why is the guy in the yt vid crying... ?
-You're entitled to your opinion and your standards of acceptable quality. I have several levels of acceptable quality including homeowner grade "for occasional duty". All Ryobi tools I've handled meet only one category "Cheap **** not worth the purchase". JMO.in the '90s? Brother that's a hella long time ago. Most Ryobi power tools are decent for the price, but they will never be professional tools, and they sure don't market them as professional.

Maybe with daily use. I use mine for DIY stuff and have been very happy. The tools are worked hard and keep coming back for more. The drill that got me into the system is probably 12 years old now. If it died tomorrow I'd still be happy.The main problem with RYOBI is that every single tool just dies. Every. Single. One.
However, I can see that for some people, they aren't an entirely irrational choice. For your elderly grandparent on a fixed income, with limited mobility and limited retail options, buying a consumer grade tool from the local Home Deopot makes sense
The more important issue is to get the word out. Times have changed, and buyers need to adapt and evolve. Don't keep buying this stuff based actual or expected support from the previous 5-10 or 15 years etc.
FYI this wasn't something I personally purchased, I just happened to be tagging along for the trip. Got to see the events unfold first hand. Pretty shocking actually, I was suprised at the way the whole thing went down.
I learned my own lesson with Ryobi many years ago![]()


You do know who owns Milwauke, right? It’s TTI.From my understanding, most TTI power tools have a less than stellar warranty process.
While Milwaukee is my main line of battery powered tools, the two Ryobi items I have work well. Both are more utility items rather than tools (one is a fan, the other is a lamp/battery bank). I see them mostly as an option for occasional use tools that I don’t want to spend lots of cash on.
Though I’m tempted to give the Hercules a try soon, seems like a solid warranty system.
Yes, which is why I said TTI instead of Ryobi specifically. I’ve heard little positive about warranty service for Milwaukee, Ryobi, or Rigid. Haven’t heard anything about Hart.You do know who owns Milwauke, right? It’s TTI.
Unless something has changed, or my local HF is wrong, if you have any issue with the tool just bring it in and they’ll swap for another. They just check your receipt to make sure it’s within that warranty window.Sounds like Maybe Harbor Freight was just 30 years ahead of it's time. If it's broke, pitch it in the scrap pile and get another one, or something else. Get on with life.
That said, what's so great abut the new Hercules "limited" warranty?Just like the Ryobi, it's 5tool/3battery, the owner still has to ship it to the "service center" at their own expenses.
![]()
The policy hasn't changed. That's all you need to do. HF is taking no prisoners.Unless something has changed, or my local HF is wrong, if you have any issue with the tool just bring it in and they’ll swap for another. They just check your receipt to make sure it’s within that warranty window.
Agree. I've been given a lot of Ryobi as gifts and may end up giving them away just to get out from under the on-going hassle of battery failures, charger failures, handle breakage, et al.Buy cheap ****, get cheap ****. Is this concept hard to understand?
Yes, 90 days on most stuff.Unless something has changed, or my local HF is wrong, if you have any issue with the tool just bring it in and they’ll swap for another. They just check your receipt to make sure it’s within that warranty window.
Ryobi has a 90 day exchange policy at the retailerThe policy hasn't changed. That's all you need to do. HF is taking no prisoners.
and after that a three year warranty. 1990s Ryobi tools were usually USA made, or possibly Japanese made.in the '90s? Brother that's a hella long time ago. Most Ryobi power tools are decent for the price, but they will never be professional tools, and they sure don't market them as professional.
He bought into the Ryobi system to stay with one battery system.I always wonder about somebody who buys a throwaway, cheap tool then spends hours trying to warranty it when it breaks.
And you wonder why you can't afford to pay for something better....
thank for the history lesson, yes i was getting at that its not the same company anymore, most of their tools have improve along the way.1990s Ryobi tools were usually USA made, or possibly Japanese made.
Ryobi is actually a Japanese Industrial manufacturer, that is still in business.
They started manufacturing power tools in 1968.
I believe the power tools were originally Japanese made.
In 1985 Ryobi opened a die casting plant in the USA, and at some point started making power tools in the USA.
Sears Craftsman had a bunch of rebranded Ryobi tools.
Some of the USA made Ryobi Tools were very good, while others were sort of ****.
TTI, the parent company of Milwaukee etc. licensed the Ryobi name for power tool sales in the USA in 2000, and in Europe and Australia New Zealand in 2001 and 2002.
I believe Ryobi kept manufacturing tools for the Japanese market after that, but it looks like in 2018, the Ryobi Power tool brand was dold to Kyocera Group for all the remaining territories, including Africa, the Middle East, Asia and “Latin America”.
The current Ryobi line basically has nothing to do with the older pre 2000 Ryobi tools, except the name.
The color of the tools isn’t even the same.
I sort of wonder what the situation for the brand is like in Mexico and other nearby countries.
I just looked up Kyocera, and they seem own Senco (purchased in 2017), and also produce industrial power tool lines.
Latin America may be better off.
I started the thread because it was $200 tool, and at the time of purchasse, had 2 yr warranty available via Home depot.not sure why even reviving this thread lol, again Ryobi is a low-cost homeowner tool. They are so cheap, not sure why even go to the trouble of trying to get one fixed or replace. The tool in question was a 40$ tool and consistently sell for about that price. there is duds in every tool brand, personally my 5y old Ryobi tools haven't kicked the bucket. Haven't broken a single tool, heck my brothers TTI made craftsman impact broke and i send him my oldest Ryobi impact(same model) to use(still kicking at 8y old). funny thing the Ryobi in red(craftsman) have a weird following, people love them.
I started the thread because it was $200 tool, and at the time of purchasse, had 2 yr warranty available via Home depot.
After the purchase, the terms of the Warranty changed. Further, after the original change, they changed again. Not only are they ******* off loyal original customers, but ******* off their own business partners (eg the outsourced warranty centers).
This thread documents this case, and allows other to search and read the history of these changes. Ie, to get the word out of these changes so other people can make informed decisions.
Lastly, this wasn't my own purchase. But something observed by a person closre to their target market (ie non-tool enthusianst, on a budget).
The original purchase decision was rational and based on information available at the time (ie, based on written terms that tools have a real warranty). I think this kind of nit-picking is unwarranted.
Nobody here was buying HF electronics expecting Mitutoyu or Milwaukee.
Cheers
Most people expect “cheap tools” to mean no name Chinese ****, from a brand they’ve never heard of, orThe tool in the video has never been 200$, you never mentioned what tool you tried warranty or at least i miss it. Also the person in the video got a new tool, so the warranty did work. The general consensus here is if you buy a cheap tool don't expect a great warranty, clearly you were expecting Milwaukee whith the start of this thread and reviving it. In today's works you should expect terrible service from cheap tools, specially from disposable items.