TheGrooveking
Well-known member
Their selling Gearwrench ratchets. One dealer I know is telling the me hanics that he will offer them 100% trade in value towards Matco ratchets when he gets them.
TheGrooveking
TheGrooveking
From the beginning of Matco being its own tool company they had Wright making their sockets until 93/94, then I thought they were made in the same manufacturing plant as Armstrong?
TheGrooveking
Almost forgot about this thread. Buddy of mine got his 1/4 ratchet swapped out no issues. I put my hands on it.....its a silver eagle. Lmao. Told him the scoop about how the eagle line is China husky. Dealer never mentioned an upgrade at a later time. He thought he was getting a new ratchet and took it for his broken one. Mmmmm
They ignored my inquiry too.
Are they still in business?
Only a matter of time until they just switch over to just selling re-branded Gearwrench ratchets, seeing as they have no problem with not stamping USA on the comfort grip ratchets due to an imported piece of rubber.
Sorry if it came across any different, but my issue is that they'd rather import a cheap piece of rubber and skip stamping USA on an otherwise American made ratchet than to spend the little extra to have the handle poured in the states, not that they should stamp USA anyway.Umm, that's the law? I'm far from a fan of apex/danaher/whatever they are called now, but shame on them for following the law.
Sorry if it came across any different, but my issue is that they'd rather import a cheap piece of rubber and skip stamping USA on an otherwise American made ratchet than to spend the little extra to have the handle poured in the states, not that they should stamp USA anyway.
Guess that Armstrong ratchet is of the list. Is Mac affected at all? Or is Stanley not apart of it?
Sorry if it came across any different, but my issue is that they'd rather import a cheap piece of rubber and skip stamping USA on an otherwise American made ratchet than to spend the little extra to have the handle poured in the states, not that they should stamp USA anyway.
Well aware Matco doesn't make their own tools.Except Matco makes no tools. They have the ratchets custom made and assembled for them alone as Apex does not make comfort grips for their USA ratchets. Other than tool boxes Matco contracts every tool they sell and is in no way directly apart of Apex. As far as im concerned you can thank Danaher for this disaster when they decided to sell off their tool production and leave Matco as little more than a tool box factory and distribution warehouse.

That makes more sense- Yeah, I'd definitely agree with you there! Mayhew at least put the effort into buying a US factory to get their handles made in. Matco/Apex is way larger than mayhew- if they wanted to, they could have already.
hold that thought. i just bought a set of dominator pry bars and on the label it says "assembled in the USA of US and global components"
fwiw, i was looking for an armstrong 11-992 for about 6 months. they have just finally hit in stock at most places. the 12-992 is still hard to obtain. i guess they are starting to put some products out though.
i saw a comment about matco tools on my facebook. a friend of mine shared a link, then a friend of his(which is a matco driver) posted a comment that they are the strongest tools out there, superior to snap on. so i commented that matco doesnt make one single tool, it is all outsourced from other companies and they removed my comment.![]()
From everything I've seen Matco has been far from classy over the last 6 months.
Threads like this really make me wonder why anyone would buy Matco anything. You can buy the same stuff for a fraction of the price from the company that actually makes it, or get something way better with the same convenience for a nearly identical price from Snap On or Mac.
A lot has to do with the route owner. If the Snap On guy is an ******* and the Matco guy is great. You will buy more Matco stuff. I think for many(myself included) that plays the biggest part.
While I can understand that to some degree, I've never met a Matco tool I felt the need to pay tool truck prices for. And I haven't seen a Matco truck in many years...and I live in one of the most populated areas of the USA.
For cost conscious buyers none of the tool truck tools are worth buying. Okay so you don't like matco tools, doesn't make the argument for a $500 snap-on wrench set better though.
While I can understand that to some degree, I've never met a Matco tool I felt the need to pay tool truck prices for. And I haven't seen a Matco truck in many years...and I live in one of the most populated areas of the USA.
just called back in. F riday I was told shipping Monday, today im told June. 10 months for a ratchet. time to talk to the Attorney generals office in Ohio about a consumer fraud case
I have 3 ratchets in for warranty retail value 293.75
So are they still fixing Gearwrench ratchets? Can't they just give you an imported repair kit for now?
They would only have the 84T kits. There is no 88T import kit. The 84T is also much more likely to self reverse or pop into neutral, or even jam. Both the USA craftsmand and the imported gearwrench versions have this issue, so it's probably a design issue. I wouldn't want that kit in my armstrong ratchets.
I throw 84 tooth ratchet kits in my Armstrong stuff, Armstrong in GW. I see no difference.
I just bought some extra GW kits, and now if anything breaks which they will fit in, they get swapped.
Huh, never once had that issue with any of my Gearwrench ratchets when I was working on trucks. Still have my 1/2" flex, which after 6 years now has never skipped a tooth, reversed or any other issue and it's been put to work on some big stuff as a 3/4" using an adapter and a piece of pipe.They would only have the 84T kits. There is no 88T import kit. The 84T is also much more likely to self reverse or pop into neutral, or even jam. Both the USA craftsmand and the imported gearwrench versions have this issue, so it's probably a design issue. I wouldn't want that kit in my armstrong ratchets.

They would only have the 84T kits. There is no 88T import kit. The 84T is also much more likely to self reverse or pop into neutral, or even jam. Both the USA craftsmand and the imported gearwrench versions have this issue, so it's probably a design issue. I wouldn't want that kit in my armstrong ratchets.