allinon72
Well-known member
SK is still too expensive to be a replacement brand.

SK is still too expensive to be a replacement brand.
Too expensive compared to what?
You beat me to it. You can buy craftsman at Ace Hardware, summit racing, now the Anderson's general store in Ohio Kmart(granted it's the same company). Let's hope if it happens someone like SK buys the name and keeps it going. I know sears has NEVER made a tool and neither had craftsman really they just have it made for them. The name itself is one of the most recognized and iconic brand names ever. Dare I say top 5? Ask a random person what they think of when tools are mentioned and 95% will say Craftsman. That said the name itself is far too valuable to die. Someone will keep it going if sears folds.
They've already started. Craftsman is available at Ace and other hardware store chains. Preparing for the inevitable I guess.
I just hope they stay out of the box stores. The craftsman name at locally owned stores would be a big boost to the small business owners.
Craftsman... They really fit as a step up from craftsman rather than an equal.
Craftsman... They really fit as a step up from craftsman rather than an equal.
I agree! My replacement brands for Craftsman are Carlyle, Gearwrench and Kobalt. Napa, Lowes and tooltopia.com all have sales frequently enough so that their tools are similar in price to Craftsman.
Does that mean you don't consider SK as a replacement brand?

I agree! My replacement brands for Craftsman are Carlyle, Gearwrench and Kobalt. Napa, Lowes and tooltopia.com all have sales frequently enough so that their tools are similar in price to Craftsman. Carlyle and Gearwrench are a step above in quality compared to craftsman IMO. I really prefer Carlyle tools though. For me the quality, fit and finish and features of their tools are the best I can afford. The warranty is tops too. My local Napa store said they will warranty anything that says Carlyle on it, so long as the name is visible. No reciepts, no store credits, no BS. Just bring in the busted Carlyle tool and get a new one or at least order a new one, on the spot no questions asked. My local Napa guys confidently stated that the fine print about having to keep your receipt for Carlyle tools is just corporate covering themselves legally. Almost any tool that says Napa, Carlyle, and even Evercraft can be warrantied so long as they have a similar old tool to base the warranty on.[/QUOT
The last time I checked Carlyle tools were pretty darn expensive compared to Craftsman. Pretty close if not the same or more than SK. Carlyle seems to be very nice tools but pricey compared to Craftsman. For the price quality USA made ratio there will never be another craftsman. It is truly an end of an era.
. For the price quality USA made ratio there will never be another craftsman. It is truly an end of an era.
Sadly, in 20-30 years, there will be people chatting online about how they love and miss their quality "vintage" Kobalt and Husky handtools.![]()
The last time I checked Carlyle tools were pretty darn expensive compared to Craftsman. Pretty close if not the same or more than SK.
Carlyle seems to be very nice tools but pricey compared to Craftsman. For the price quality USA made ratio there will never be another craftsman. It is truly an end of an era.
If I were to do it all over again, I would skip the snap on, skip the craftsman, skip the matco, cornwell, mac and go straight to SK.
That I agree with you 100% on and it is very sad!
Wow-it seems like on every post someone is recommending SK Tools. It almost looks like SK is running a marketing program on GJ![]()
My real job is economics/business analysts. I think the Craftsman USA obituary is way to pre-mature. If I had to make a bet on Craftsman, as well as other tool companies bringing their manufacturing back to the USA in the next 5 years - I would take the bet that they would all be back. The US in in the process of devaluing their currency against the developing market economies (China, India, etc) and China is experiencing high inflation because of their rapid growth causing their wages to increase, these two reasons will bring back lots of manufacturing here to the US in the next 3 to 7 years. Keep the faith.![]()
Used Snap-on from eBay.
I already miss my quality Husky hand tools.
Obviously there have been many complaints on here about the quality of craftsman tools (and some other brands for that matter) going steeply down hill. This got me thinking. In today's market, who would you see taking the place of the traditional craftsman quality and value?
This is primarily for the home garage mechanics and part time people that don't rely on tools for a living, but still do a fair amount of wrenching. factors that come to mind are quality, price, and warranty (ease and coverage).
I'm a big fan of buying products made in the USA, but don't have a problem with off-shore brands as long as the quality is there. I'd also like to hear responses for complete tool lines, not so much "Brand "X's" ratchets are good, and brand "Y's" screwdrivers are good.
thoughts?
Or is it just Harbor Freight or tool truck these days?
Something to think about:
All Wal-Mart would have to do is offer and advertise no-questions asked lifetime warranty exchanges in their stores and Stanley tools could take over the Craftsman mantle overnight. They already have the name recognition, and 90% of non-professionals don't care at all about the COO. Honestly, their tools aren't half bad either. They look and feel on par with the Taiwanese lines at Home Depot, Lowe's, Auto stores, etc.
Warranty convenience is the single biggest advantage that Craftsman had/had going for it. I'll never buy SK, Armstrong or Proto because I have no idea how to exchange one of their tools when it breaks. Wal-Mart could become the new standard in warranty convenience if it chooses to.
Mid 90's USA made husky tools were the ****, especially the long pattern combo wrenches. I have a full set in both sae and metric. I keep a close eye on them and they never leave my garage.
Wow-it seems like on every post someone is recommending SK Tools. It almost looks like SK is running a marketing program on GJ![]()
Since we're going down that road, what do you think of Ed Lampert and his involvement with Sears? Do you really think he'll keep it going long enough for this to happen? I think he wants the stores to fail so he can sell off Craftsman (the Chinese manufacturing just increases his margin on the books when he sells the brand) and he'll then sell off the real estate which has a higher value than the actual store anyway. I seriously doubt that the real estate has the value they claim it does, but I digress.