mrshaun
Well-known member
they have an industrial or national account and if they buy at the govt prices they are making 20-30 percent on the ratchet.
Hahaha.
Might want to "check yourself before you wreck yourself" there Roots.
NAYLOR is doing it wrong.
I've been on all but two continents.
I've lived overseas extensively.
I've been in many many mfgr. facilities all around the world.
All of the above professionally and NOT as a member of the military.
The OP did not list what country he was working in (but McMaster Carr was mention, so I assume North America), but as you know tool theft is nothing new to any industry in any part of the world.
****** tools breed ****** mfg. which breeds ****** products and often injur those using them.
So, either make your employee buy all their own tools, set up a tool crib where tools are checked out and employees are held accountable daily for thier return, issue tools for each employee when employed with a ser. # and hold employee accountable for their return if/when employment is terminated, assign a shop foreman to control a limited amt. of general use tools, but hold that individual responsible for their return, or a combination of the above.
If company tools are "getting legs" and being stolen, then it's not the fault of the tool but the fault of mgmt's inability to control their property. Downgrading tool quality to the point of possible injury, production slow- downs or even downtime is attempting to cure the symptom and not the disease and is really just a band-aid over a much bigger problem..
they have an industrial or national account and if they buy at the govt prices they are making 20-30 percent on the ratchet.
I
So rather than setting up a system for checking out tools, I will buy something that I am not as worried about growing legs. Now, you can bash me all you want because I'm not doing it your prescribed way, but at the end of the day what I get will work both safely and effectively.
No bashing by me.
Buying lower end tools does not really solve your problem but merely masks it to the point of deniying that a tools security problem exists.
If owners, mgmt. or yourself can't or won;t commit to the staff ,resources or a system to protect company owned property, they sure as hell better not ***** when tools go missing and the costs associated with replacing items repetitively.
Sounds like a "lose-lose" predicament professionally to me.
Good luck with whatever works.

You're assuming he's buying lower end tools, which he never said.
You're jumping all over him based entirely on baseless assumptions.
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I will be placing an order from Mcmaster this coming week. I let you know how I make out. We have used Mcmaster many times, but never for tools.
What you gonna get? We need to make a list of what brand is received. I'm sure it could be any number of brands. Some of the pics its easy to tell a proto and that FBOF80. I think SO is the only one who makes a flex off set like that.
roots, Snap on thrives off os the mobile dealer. if they let every discount warehouse sell the stuff then it would drive us out of business super fast.
national / industrial accounts are for business use only and not for personal or resale ( overseas military contractors are an exception to that along with the shool programs )
but a business that buys and then turns and flips it is not allowed.

Snap on is 127.95 and McMaster 129.05 how is that better than Snap on ?![]()
I wish I could get a paper catalog. Apparently they are like gold lol