..."Warranty is worthless"
I tend to agree, on the theory that if it broke in the first place, it wasn't good enough, anyway. That being said, sometimes you use a tool for something it isn't really meant for, or it wears out, or.... stuff happens
I don't prioritize the warranty, but most decent stuff will have it, anyway.
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I like this perspective. But I also like being covered by that warranty when something happens.
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"Designs were perfected a century ago."
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO THEY WEREN'T!!!!!!!
I'm literally trying to think of an example where that is true, and failing. Sockets, wrenches, ratchets, pliers, hammers... I guess chisels and pry bars haven't changed much, but everything else is radically different.
Off-corner loading, pear-head ratchets, ratchet wrenches, anti-vibe hammers, groovelock pliers...
I guess screwdrivers are more-or-less the same, if you don't count the 57 different types of head they have come out with.
Good post! You're making me think!
Well, thinking from the perspective of the current start of the art of tools, I too am having a hard time thinking of tools that have not had improvements in the past century. Chisels and punches have gotten parabolic striking heads, and there are lots of improved pry-bar designs.
However, when I think about what century old tools I have that have stood up to the test of time, I can think of more than a handful. My Eiffel plier wrench is the first that comes to mind. Perfect Handle screwdrivers make for crummy screwdrivers, but they're an irreplaceable class of straight pry bars. Now when it comes to my woodworking hand tools, perhaps some designs WERE perfected a century ago (though even there, there I see some modern improvements).
But for the most part, I'm going to have to agree that designs could not have been perfected a century ago, for the simple reason that the industrial and technological use for so many of our tools didn't even exist a century ago. Six point sockets that "Snap On" to a square drive ratchet didn't exist a century ago, as the automotive and aircraft industries of the time were still in their infancy, and were still using tooling inherited from the previous generation.
If you wanted to set the date to only 70 years ago, I think that we'd feel pretty comfortable using the tools of 1947, as they were the "grandparents" of the tools we see today, but I'm still thinking they'd feel kind of alien as well.