18" and 24" bar clamps are a pass. i haven't tried to hold a truck frame down with them or anything, but for clamping wood for glue ups, nailing, sawing etc they all work great. got 6 of the 18" and 4 of the 24" and all are without issue. $5 for the 24", less for the 18". rubber grip handles on the clamp screws. enough pressure to take the twist out of 2x4 and 2x6's. not the ratcheting style, the ones i got are the quick release bar clamps. i'm sure bessey's may be nicer or heavier built but i got 10 clamps for the price of 1-2 bessey's.
also the 10" japanese style double edge saw. $10 and sharp as all get out if you like a pull saw and don't mind that it's disposable. (induction hardened teeth can't be sharpened but not a negative for me). way sharper than one of the stanley fat max pull saws i picked up off amazon.
been using their 25oz california framing hammer also. seems solid enough so far (driven around 500 nails or more). for $7 it'll work until i get a replacement handle for my vaughn framing hammer. only thing i don't care for, it's a little on the light side. my vaughn is 28oz and i'm not sure if it's the head, the handle or both - just feels a bit lighter and less 'oomph' when driving nails but does fairly well esp for being so cheap. other framers i looked at, like vaughn or estwing start around $30+. i figure if this one craps out i'm only out $7. wasn't aware it had a nail set feature on the top of the head with a groove and magnet for one handed starting if needed. not used to using that method so it's a little awkward but works decent. the nail didn't pop out sideways or anything and it did set.
i'd say all 3 of these pass so long as you're not picky. they're not cadillac tools, but they're solid (not flimsy feeling) and so far have met or exceeded my expectation for cheap tools. pretty basic tools, hard to screw up - but the hammer head wasn't loose, clamps don't twist or loosen/strip threads and the saw cuts true. (it's a pullsaw, so it has to be kept in mind it's a thinner kerf and more subject to binding when drifting back through the wood before applying another pull stroke unlike a stiffer western saw).