warmpancakes
Well-known member
Sears holding sold craftman not sears the retail store if the retail store goes kaput sears holding still exist, Eddie didnt become a billionaire being dumb
Craftsman recently did what I believe to have been a test run for a Premium "Craftsman Industrial" all USA Made brand. Perhaps that was a move to show Stanley its potential as a premium brand.
Craftsman by far has the largest chunk of the mechanics tool set market, Stanley does not. Tried selling Dewalt branded socket sets in Sears stores a few years back which failed. Overall, good move for Stanley, got Craftsman Cheap, and no longer a competitor. Lots of potential Sears just did not have the time or money to focus on.
7. I damn near bought a "butterfly" impact wrench. Was $59, now $19. No COO on the tool on display, no boxes in the locked-up cabinet underneath. Apparently the display unit is the last one one in the store. If there were COO, and it wasn't ChiCom, it'd be mine.
Does anyone know who the OEM was for Craftsman Nextec? I have a set of those and really like them for light duty stuff. It's nice to have a lighter weight tool sometimes.
Sears holding sold craftman not sears the retail store if the retail store goes kaput sears holding still exist, Eddie didnt become a billionaire being dumb
I understand that. My Mac air tools were advertised as "Made in USA", but I've come to believe that they were actually made in Japan by SP Air. Snap-On removed the "Made In USA" from the molded grips of the MG-series impacts, although they're still claiming USA on the web site. Taiwan I could accept. South Korea I could accept. Japan I could accept.The airtools have been imported for years.
THAT'S what Stanley wants? They paid close to a billion dollars to market the shittiest lawn 'n' garden **** available today? They could have contracted for ****** lawn 'n' garden **** from...anyone...painted it red and labeled it "Craftymen" the same way HF knocked-off Chicago Pneumatic with Pittsburg Pneumatic, or Chicago Electric. SBD must be run by retards.
You're making the assumption that SBD will push Crapsman upmarket. That would be entirely contrary to SBD's long history of destroying once-respected brand names by pushing them downmarket faster than their reputation plummeted. In other words, SBD makes money by removing value from consumer goods faster than the General Public can keep up with. And THAT'S the company that's going to save Crapsman?Are you just going to keep making sensational posts with the hopes of stirring up trouble? They will be producing their own line of craftsman tools, not simply marketing the tools/equipment that sears sells. For many items, that means they will be made by SBD, not Apex anymore. As far as lawn equipment, Stanley probably will try to make many of that in house too, and farm out the larger stuff. If you had read the articles, you would have realized that, but keep ranting away....
Snap-On removed the "Made In USA" from the molded grips of the MG-series impacts, although they're still claiming USA on the web site.
Since Stanley isn't in lawn and garden, they should just dump that as its over saturated already with cheap junk. As for the hand tools, it sounds like they will be USA, but will have to wait to see as its too early. Since you can buy Stanley just about anywhere, the options are unlimited as to wear to sell craftsman. I do think is new USA craftsman comes out, it will be more expensive then we are use to for craftsman. Craftsman prices really have not gone up in 20 years and that is why we saw quailty slip. If we are taking a decent mid level USA tool line, I'd expect their prices to be in line with SK or wright.
Pretty much every article from financial analysts are calling this a win for Stanley because it adds the lawn and garden market to their portfolio.
But won't they just licence that to the same people who make it for sears?
My uneducated opinion, for what it's worth :..
* People keep mentioning HD, Lowe's, and where SBD Craftsman would fit in among Husky and Kobalt. I see a lot of potential for the brand at smaller local home improvement and semi-pro chains -- Valu, HEP, Aubuchon, and the like. There's the rural/country living chains like Tractor Supply and Farm & Fleet. Also, there's still a lot of independent auto/truck parts stores out there.
* Remember, Stanley is an international brand. I'm willing to bet that Craftsman has a fair bit of name recognition outside of North America. American tool/DIY message boards and blogs have an international audience. Many overseas markets don't have an affordable middle-end-made-in-a-western-first-world-country option for tools -- it's either COO China or Taiwan at the low-to-middle end, or very pricey German and Japanese brands, along with some American truck brands. A reasonably priced brand of tools, made in the USA, with some "forbidden fruit" cachet, could fly off the shelves in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and the U.K. Think about Craftsman on the shelves at Bunnings, Wickes, and Homebase, among others.
The people running SB&D aren't stupid and their ability to evaluate a business in a retail environment is infinitely better than Eddie Lampert could ever dream.
Anyone who owns Sears stock is either:
- An insider
- A victim in waiting
I own a ton of Craftsman hand tools and have banked on the warranty for years. I am worried that fact now makes me:
- A fool
I just warrantied a t27 torx driver I've had for 25 years and got another made in USA replacement, also a double box ratcheting 1/4 5/16 also USA. Over the years not too many to swap out but always glad I could.
I think the biggest problem craftsman had is that most people now a days buy their tools the same place as their diy materials. Whether automotive or construction. Since Sears doesn't sell stuff like that they're losing sales to home depot etc. No one is going to go online for every project they're doing to ask what screwdriver they should be buying, when it's right there right then made in USA lifetime warranty.....sold.
Craftsman could outsell everything else with the right distributing and consolidating overlapping brands into one good well known one... Even millennials know the name and they're the future atm.
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How many Crafstman tools have you had to warranty over the years?
How many Crafstman tools have you had to warranty over the years?
I've had a couple craftsman ratchets rebuilt and a deep socket that broke over the last few decades and that is about it.
I doubt that the warranty will go away,
but even if it did, I wouldn't be that worried.
Didn't Stanley make Craftsman tools 20 years ago when they were still decent?
Chris
A reasonably priced brand of tools, made in the USA, with some "forbidden fruit" cachet, could fly off the shelves in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and the U.K. Think about Craftsman on the shelves at Bunnings, Wickes, and Homebase, among others.
Homebase has given up, Kinchrome seems to rule Australia, in the UK very few people have heard of Craftsman, and TBH American made goods don't really command a premium, Snap on only sell anything because people can pay weekly and they replace anything that breaks.
Parrothead said:I bought a used Craftsman lawnmower for my renters (nice rental w/ SS appliances, etc.) to upgrade my MTD powered Honda, and their reaction was "Oh, a Craftsman! That's a good one!". The name carries much more value to John and Jenny Homeowner than it does to the tool geeks on here.
EOC_Jason said:I honestly can't see one company keeping so many different brands & lines of production going, consolidating would save them money and allow less overlap of identical items (under different brands) in the stores.
EOC_Jason said:Why make two or three identical products just with different names? Because people WANT a certain name and think said name is the best value for them.
Still can't believe the 900m number... for a brand name .... hmmmm that's absurd
That's what is wrong with the global economy , there are "people" who would pay that amount of money for practically NOTHING only because they are sure to make profit out of it .
Just take 2 minutes to think about this ... 900 millions !!!
How many tools a company needs to "make " and sell to cover that in profit?
I bet all craftsman hand tools that ever were made don't add up to 900m , that's an incredible amount of tools ...
The profit will be made in some market schemes not in actual tool sales .

Just take 2 minutes to think about this ... 900 millions !!!
I bet all craftsman hand tools that ever were made don't add up to 900m , that's an incredible amount of tools ...
The profit will be made in some market schemes not in actual tool sales .
Superbec said:"900 millions !!!"
That's how the economy works dude... it's all air. Look at the big startups like uber. Worth billions but not making cash![]()
The investor overview says Craftsman's retail sales for last year were about $1.9 billion.