So, a couple of months ago I received a Wera bit ratchet kit from a friend as a gift for some work I did for them on their car (they felt bad I had to constantly use a wrench to turn my bits). I took it out of its package, turned it a bit and then put it in my toolbox.
Maybe two weeks ago I grabbed it to take some panels off my moms car to install a ipod player for her. The thing keeps self reversing on me. I would be tightening a screw and then all the sudden it starts coming out. I contact my friend to get the info to send it back, but it is beyond amazon's return period.
Anyway, I emailed Wera to see if there was a rebuild kit I could buy (like for a regular ratchet), but they email me back and say that there isn't and I have to send it in. No big deal, usually I throw it in a flat rate box and it is off (do this with Cornwell because of their chrome all the time). Problem here is they are in Canada. So now I have to pay somewhere between $20-25 for them to fix their own mistake!! On a bit ratchet that cost $40.
I find it a little ridiculous. I told them I will just keep the bits from the kit and buy a cheap $5 bit ratchet. I like their products but I probably won't be buying any more.
Anyway.....Lessons Learned:
1. Consider the warranty/ease of warranty when purchasing a product
2. If the product is really good but hard to get warrantied, make sure you try the product out thoroughly before the return period ends.
3. Just know that even if the product is really good and it works when you initially get it, if it breaks and you can't get it warrantied easily or cheaply you are SOL.
Just somethings I learned and some things to consider when buying tools
Maybe two weeks ago I grabbed it to take some panels off my moms car to install a ipod player for her. The thing keeps self reversing on me. I would be tightening a screw and then all the sudden it starts coming out. I contact my friend to get the info to send it back, but it is beyond amazon's return period.
Anyway, I emailed Wera to see if there was a rebuild kit I could buy (like for a regular ratchet), but they email me back and say that there isn't and I have to send it in. No big deal, usually I throw it in a flat rate box and it is off (do this with Cornwell because of their chrome all the time). Problem here is they are in Canada. So now I have to pay somewhere between $20-25 for them to fix their own mistake!! On a bit ratchet that cost $40.
I find it a little ridiculous. I told them I will just keep the bits from the kit and buy a cheap $5 bit ratchet. I like their products but I probably won't be buying any more.
Anyway.....Lessons Learned:
1. Consider the warranty/ease of warranty when purchasing a product
2. If the product is really good but hard to get warrantied, make sure you try the product out thoroughly before the return period ends.
3. Just know that even if the product is really good and it works when you initially get it, if it breaks and you can't get it warrantied easily or cheaply you are SOL.
Just somethings I learned and some things to consider when buying tools


