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What is Craftsman's pricing strategy now?

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dimichele

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 21, 2008
Messages
101
Craftsman raised panel ratchets are rubbish. They haven't been any good for years and aren't even worth bringing in for the warranty. The 3/8 I have from my grandfather is ok. The ratchets that came with the set I bought ~20 years ago have failed almost instantly or have never been used. They're either in the trash or in a pile of tools I never plan on using.
 

trainer

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2005
Messages
2,019
Location
Northern Ontario, Canada
High-Low retailing strategy.
They'll put a stupid regular price on the shelf, then put them on special a few times a year for 75 or 80% off.

They can also claim inflated savings on multi-piece sets.

In many jurisdictions, they may be called on to prove "regular" or "was" pricing or face fines and other penalties.
 

nbpt100

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2016
Messages
2,302
Location
Massachusetts
The one practicle feature of the Craftsman Brand Home Owners like is the lifetime warranty. If what I am reading is true about how Lowes is turning people away and sending them to Craftsman to warrantee out something then even the naive homeowner will start to loose some likeing to the brand. They do not want the extra work and hassle. who does? If this becomes the norm at Lowes, Ace, Napa, etc, the causual Craftsman tool user will give HF serious consideration.
 

BlakeTheCarGuy

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 10, 2018
Messages
9,388
Location
Roanoke Virginia
The one practicle feature of the Craftsman Brand Home Owners like is the lifetime warranty. If what I am reading is true about how Lowes is turning people away and sending them to Craftsman to warrantee out something then even the naive homeowner will start to loose some likeing to the brand. They do not want the extra work and hassle. who does? If this becomes the norm at Lowes, Ace, Napa, etc, the causual Craftsman tool user will give HF serious consideration.
Yep Lowe’s and Ace have turned me away for all my warranties. I just email Craftsman directly and get a replacement sent to me. But I’ve also been denied at Harbor Freight because it was one of their cheaper tools without a name on it.
 

dwasifar

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2017
Messages
2,101
I wouldn't buy the China-made Craftsman ratchets I've seen. The China version of the venerable raised panel is just horrible. But the Taiwan ones are better. I have the 120t (actually 60t dual-pawl) Taiwan Craftsman gunmetal-chrome ratchets in all three sizes.

Are they as good as tool truck tools? Well, duh, no. But for what they cost ($25-$30-$35) they're actually super nice. I used to have a set of 1990s-vintage tri-wing Craftsman ratchets, and a couple of raised panel USA CM from the 80s, and these new ones are way better than either of those. The fit and finish is excellent, the chrome is flawless, the action is smooth and accurate with no slop, the lever and button work as expected.

I don't wrench for a living, so I will likely never give these the kind of use (or abuse) that would make a truck tool worth the money. So I don't have truck tools to compare them to, and they probably wouldn't fare really well in that comparison if I did. But I think they could be considered prosumer grade. I do have Stanley, Kobalt and Tekton ratchets to compare them to, all Taiwan manufacture, and they're definitely better than the Stanley and Kobalt. Not sure whether I would say they're better quality than Tekton, but I reach for the new CMs more than the Tektons because of the finer tooth and because I like the grip better.
 

toddmorr

Well-known member
Joined
May 4, 2017
Messages
655
Location
Prescott, Arizona
have to agree, i recently got a 3/8 long pattern flex, #99426, 72 tooth on a warranty exchange for an ancient ratchet that was skipping. list price of 68 bucks.
Anyway, I quite like it. Nice smooth movement, feels strong.....kinda doubt I would ever pay list price for it but on sale I think it's quite competitive with anything from Tekton and many other brands.
 
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Walkers

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Joined
May 17, 2021
Messages
3,912
Location
Cave Creek Az
I went into my local Napa today and their back wall display was full of Craftsman tools. I never liked their ratchets when I was young (70s), but their wrenches seemed fine. It was the stuff I got for Christmas. I wish I valued it a little more back then. My SO ratchet was the first expensive tool that I bought, my gateway tool.
 

slowtwitch73

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 18, 2019
Messages
5,876
Location
Hellgate
Nobody said the tools don't work. The problem is there are superior products available at far lower prices.
Should have clarified I was generally speaking about the older stuff.. the world is drowning in it.

I don't know anything about new Craftsman because my old stuff lasts.
 

JazzBlueRT

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2017
Messages
1,215
I went into my local Napa today and their back wall display was full of Craftsman tools. I never liked their ratchets when I was young (70s), but their wrenches seemed fine. It was the stuff I got for Christmas. I wish I valued it a little more back then. My SO ratchet was the first expensive tool that I bought, my gateway tool.
A lot of things have changed since 1970.

Words cannot describe the logic fail of comparing an 18 tooth 1970's Craftsman ratchet to a modern 72 tooth Craftsman ratchet.
 

plinker

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2007
Messages
4,286
Location
Northern Wi
A lot of things have changed since 1970.

Words cannot describe the logic fail of comparing an 18 tooth 1970's Craftsman ratchet to a modern 72 tooth Craftsman ratchet.
Them being raised panel didnt change much for a long time. Not a fan of them myself. I do have my doubts that the 70's ratchet was 18 tooth, Likely it would have been 30-some tooth by then and a lot of people* will never have a problem with it (unless they visit this site and learn the truth).




*In particular, average homeowner who may change the oil and blade on their lawnmower, maybe their car's oil, and assemble something from Ikea.
 

Al Borland

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Joined
Jan 20, 2016
Messages
1,600
Some of those low-tooth-count undesirable raised-panel Craftsman ratchets are amazingly strong.
(At least the ones I put a cheater pipe on. :D)
Great junkyard wrenches. Most people don't know/notice/care about tooth count.
 

consti2tion

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2010
Messages
509
Location
East Texas
I grew up using the RP craftsman 18 tooth ratchets, it wasn't until I used one of my dad's high tooth count SO rats until I realized the difference. I can say without a doubt I have no desire to go back to those old RP ratchets, but I do believe their sockets are pretty decent at least the old stuff is. The new Craftsman USA I snagged on eBay seem to have a nice finish, too bad they're not consistent on having detents.
 

nbpt100

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2016
Messages
2,302
Location
Massachusetts
Some of those low-tooth-count undesirable raised-panel Craftsman ratchets are amazingly strong.
(At least the ones I put a cheater pipe on. :D)
Great junkyard wrenches. Most people don't know/notice/care about tooth count.
Exactly. The larger the teeth the stronger. I have done the same with the old 30 something tooth CM and have only broken the 1/4 inch.

I find the new CM flex ratchets at Lowes heavy. If you are using it a lot that can matter. Never used one but have looked them over at the store. I prefer Roto ratchets over flex heads. But I used both. There is a time and place when one is preferred over the other.
People on the Garage Journal care about the teeth in the ratchet. Just about anyone else doesn't.
 

m6z

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2019
Messages
2,325
Location
Missouri
The current craftsmen is the best advertisement for Harbor Freight ever.:shocking:
Some truth there.

The Icon tools look like quality stuff. From the packaging, the tools themselves and the way they're displayed in store.
 

Rabid Badger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 2, 2018
Messages
1,338
The current craftsmen is the best advertisement for Harbor Freight ever.:shocking:

Some truth there.

The Icon tools look like quality stuff. From the packaging, the tools themselves and the way they're displayed in store.

The problem with Icon is you can't buy individual wrenches, sockets etc. so if you lose a 10mm socket you have to buy another set......................

Hence the next logical step: Tekton.
 
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