When I bought the 299 piece socket set back earlier this year, it was on sale for $399, I had a $35 Sears VISA coupon and a $5 Sears coupon, plus 15% off. Made it $305.99. I wouldn't buy it for anywhere near the full $480 at this point. Anywhere in the $350 range would be good though. A disclaimer - it comes in a big box, with the sockets in bags. Some will probably be missing, some will have defects like small bits of chrome flaking, or not sitting on a ratchet with bad indents for your ball. In all I replaced probably 7 or 8. It was painless, they shipped me new ones in the mail.
I do like the 6 point raised panel wrenches. I've never had a problem with one of those on a fastener. I like the 12 point ones less. I can't stand how they don't offer the 6 point wrenches in their tool box deals - since buying a whole 6 pt. set can put you close to one of their tool box deals.
I'll keep an eye out on this, though the return policy is a concern thats brought up above. If Craftsman is moving to non USA stuff, then what am I returning it for? This is a big part of the problem for me. If this was 1960, I'd buy a Cman set no questions asked. I don't like where they're moving now and I don't know what they're going to replace my future parts with.
Well for starters, I don't ever use wrenches to move bolts. Maybe small ones, but nothing large. You just don't have the torque, there are other better options. Second, I mostly use wrenches to back up my impact wrench. I suppose a 6 point would be "better" but honestly, I've never ever had an issue with rounding out a nut using a 12 point wrench (I bought the
43 piece set back in Feb) to just hold a nut on the other side. I know a few pro mechanics, and they don't even have 6 point wrenches.
That being said, if you prefer 6 point, buy the 6 point and sell off your 12 points on ebay. Done right, with a little luck, you'll get the majority of the money back with them. I would bet you can sell a brand new 12 point set on ebay for around $45-$50. That $100 6 point set would cost around $72 after sale, discount, and such (just a guess). So you're talking another $30 or so out of pocket. That is what I did with my tool box wrench set, and I was into the 43 piece set for around $110 plus I got to keep all my small ignition wrenches, around a $15 value.
Have you done any research on the
history of SK? They have been bought, sold, bankrupt, etc. many many times in their history. The name SK is just that, a name. I would venture to say that the only company that has maintained it's own production plants in America is Snap-On. However, even they have shipped their subsidiaries overseas, such as BluePoint and JH Williams. Stanley, once a US powerhouse, is almost all overseas. My fathers garage is filled with tools that proclaim "lifetime warranty", yet they are all out of business.
Sears moving stuff overseas is an issue that popped into my mind. However, I'm not as concerned about them moving the hard line, raised panel stuff over there. Not nearly as I would be worried that I would break something.
One thing Cman has going for it is its cost. Lets be clear, the biggest problem for the home DIY person is probably the "oops, I lost it" scenario, than the "it broke" scenario.
I am meticulous in keeping my tools organized, and I just misplaced a 10mm wrench. Very irritating, but its under $6 to fix if I can't find it. I never broke any Cman sockets or combination wrenches.
Me neither. Which is why I'm not terribly concerned about warranty at this point in time. Whether that be Sears/Craftsman, SK, Snap-On, or you name it. Using them properly, there isn't much to go wrong. Sure it might happen. Was I willing to spend 8x on Snap-On over it? No. Or 4x SK or Wright. Nope.
I went on a buying binge here recently (since Jan 2011, I started making good $$) and have snapped up a lot of USA Craftsman tools, that they are slowly phasing out. I'm pretty much done buying my tools, for the most part. I'm glad I got in while I could still afford reasonably priced, reasonable quality USA tools. Looks like you are going down that road to.
If I didn't care about USA brand, I would be buying import, probably Stanley from Wal-Mart. When I was younger and much poorer, I used a Dollar Store tool kit to replace my rear brakes (rotors and pads). The Haynes manual cost more than the tools did.