Bought another one of those earlier. Will report back on the fragrance when it arrives.
J/K man !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Bought another one of those earlier. Will report back on the fragrance when it arrives.
Does anyone else find the PB flat blade screwdrivers difficult to use? The tips are thinner than the average screwdriver and I found they keep slipping out of the screw head which was quite annoying! No problems with the PH/PZ of course. Oh and i never had a problem with the smell of the SwissGrip handles either![]()
Received my last order from amazon today. I am all pb swissed out!
All in, $103.40

Does anyone else find the PB flat blade screwdrivers difficult to use? The tips are thinner than the average screwdriver and I found they keep slipping out of the screw head which was quite annoying! No problems with the PH/PZ of course. Oh and i never had a problem with the smell of the SwissGrip handles either![]()
BLOODFIRE!
Talk about a haul, and all for under $105? That's a steal.
[Insert Jealousy Here]
I know you! I keep buying stuff off you on eBay..
Never had a problem with PB, find them great. Maybe it's because the tips are hollow-ground (parallel) and not tapered?
Does anyone else find the PB flat blade screwdrivers difficult to use? The tips are thinner than the average screwdriver and I found they keep slipping out of the screw head which was quite annoying! No problems with the PH/PZ of course. Oh and i never had a problem with the smell of the SwissGrip handles either![]()
Its the hollow ground, you have to get used to the tip being thinner than it looks and use a bigger size. If the tip doesn't fit the fastener, its not the screwdrivers fault, just pick the one that fits.
Does anyone else find the PB flat blade screwdrivers difficult to use? The tips are thinner than the average screwdriver and I found they keep slipping out of the screw head which was quite annoying! No problems with the PH/PZ of course. Oh and i never had a problem with the smell of the SwissGrip handles either![]()
Received my last order from amazon today. I am all pb swissed out!
All in, $103.40
LOL. Me too.
One problem with the sales is that those prices are now my established values for these things. I probably couldn't force myself to pay more than 20 bucks for a set of PB Swiss screwdrivers at this point.
LOL. Me too.
One problem with the sales is that those prices are now my established values for these things. I probably couldn't force myself to pay more than 20 bucks for a set of PB Swiss screwdrivers at this point.
...
One problem with the sales is that those prices are now my established values for these things. .
Problem is it squeezes everyone else making things. Something's got to give at some point. I wonder if the whole sell cheap thing has a noticeable affect on quality manufacturing. Even if people want it, they don't want to pay for it.
It's interesting how some industries are highly controlled price-wise (try to buy a bicycle online or find a deal on Stickley) and others aren't.
One answer to the declining margins conundrum, which is doubly felt by electronics manufacturers, is direct sales.
Pep: is there any difference between say cheapo mfrs and really, really high end? I imagine there is, in selling, since the high end guys probably charge what they want and get it. I assume there's no mid-range in electronics anymore, but I don't know. I guess that's two questions...
You know, there's all levels of how this kind of thing is done. I can't speak for consumer electronics (which is probably what you're thinking about), but for professional/industrial products, there's a lot of ways to skin the cat. I've seen places that did 0% of manufacturing in-house and basically had some 3rd party ship completely finished goods to a warehouse for resale to a dealer network. About as far as I've seen go the other direction, at least since the offshoring really hit in earnest in the 1980's, is to do your own circuit board stuffing and soldering, final assembly and test, etc, in-house. Companies, except for the largest ones, rarely do casework or individual components themselves. Mind you, I'm talking about boutique products here.
With that as background, in the worlds I've dealt with, you'll see something on the order of a 3x markup on the purchased raw material to deal with...then you hit the value added resellers, dealer network, etc. I don't doubt that in some businesses, the resale network brings a lot to the table in terms of trade shows and just general salesmanship...but in other worlds, they're just order takers, and get a pretty darned big cut. High end products will, of course, tend to have a higher margin. A lot of that is to cover the higher non-recurring engineering in order to design and build the first one (and to cover the fact that you are buying components at higher cost). You can cut margins if you build a jillion of a thing (and, oddly, make it more reliable).
It's that second group of resellers, the order takers, that it wouldn't be so bad to deal out of the game. I suppose it's like the death of wholesalers with the onslaught of national retail chains like Walmart, Costco, Amazon, etc. As a side note, we've probably held down inflation to some extent by improving the efficiency of distribution, but that's a one time improvement.
Some manufacturing engineer out there might disagree with all of this, but I don't think I'm lying about anything.
Maybe you'll see a wave of aggressive direct sales for different products because of the internet. Places like Amazon can provide the infrastructure that's hard to do yourself.
i do not see this stuff anywhere, even online.
The final purchase
There are still a few goodies - I just recieved a ratcheting screwdriver for $23 so keep looking...