BonzoHansen
Well-known member
All i know is i just got a few things warrantied and have a few things left.
Also, the rumors are flying around that Sears is about to fold. Potential buyers have to be thinking that they might be better off to just wait and buy Craftsman out of bankruptcy, in order to get a better deal.
This is the key step. Once in bankruptcy, the new buyer can buy the assets of cman-- and not the liabilities. If the deal is done as a going concern, the liabilities come with the assets and are no separable.
Walmart... Unfortunately.
Skill is Bosch's low end consumer line, competing with B&D. They have been cheap stuff for many years. The only exception is their geared circular saw. Which Rockwell are you talking about. Nort American Rockwell owned Delta and Porter cable for a while and it was a low point for the brands. After some corporate musical chairs Stanley owns Porter Cable and sold Delta to a Taiwanese co., Chang Type, that builds the table saws here. The current Rockwell is an unrelated company that bought the rights to the name and builds a limited line of tools that are decent quality. Porter Cable is being sold as a big box brand but I don't know that it is much worse than it's sister brand DeWalt.This. It'll just go the way of Skil or Rockwell power tools. Even Fowler or SPI
I would sorely miss the one near me. It is a grearlt source for all kinds of hardware like springs and knobs and corks and srain reliefs and shower door hardware and dress screws and all manner of hard to find stuff. Beyond that I could care less.Sears will soon be gone. Likely Craftsman, Kenmore and Die Hard will live on. The real question is what about the independent Sears stores. In my area there are a lot of independently owned Sears stores that sale appliances, TV/stereo equipment, vacuum cleaners, Craftsman tools and mowers. What will become of these stores?
Husky hand tools and Rigid and Ryobi power tools. The exception is the red Rigid stuff that Emerson makes for general distribution and is not exclusive to HD.Lowes has Kobalt tools..........does Home Depot (or Menards) have a house brand hand tool line?
The Craftsman name is long gone among those with more than a passing interest in tools. The people that are in the market for junk will buy anything that is cheap and has the tools they want and they are not overly concerned about brand. " Look Margret, twenty five wrenches for ten bucks" They will forget about Craftsman fast enough.Walmart... Unfortunately.
I've seen almost 100% of the American bicycle industry go overseas in the last 15 years- more so, the last 8-10 years though.
Short story. Schwinn and Mongoose bikes were widely known. The baby boomers knew Schwinn. Gen-X knows Mongoose.
Schwinn filed for bankruptcy and didn't exist for one year (late 80's I believe). They were bought up and high end bikes came out of their facilities. They (along with GT, same owner) went bankrupt again in 2000'ish. Pacific bought Schwinn/GT and then Mongoose in a separate deal.
Uncertain of the future, Schwinn went to department stores and went retro with the beach cruiser and chopper look. Mongoose went to the department store also since Gen-X was at that age of having kids. Since more families go to W than the LBS (local bike shop) they get recognized a lot more.
Pacific however decided to come out with Mongoose Pro for the shops. It was a failure. Customers would say "Walmart has the same bike for $89, not $250". Despite us explaining the difference, the customer saw "a black bmx with a giro". What they didn't get was the double butted chro-moly frame, 3 piece cranks, double wall rims, 3 cross spokes for a stronger wheel, Teflon coated cables and housing (no rust)...
The point? Schwinn and Mongoose aren't bike companies ran by riders with a passion anymore. Instead it's name recognition sold by marketeers slapped on Pacific cycles for the most money they can get for a POS bike with a past good name on it.
This will happen to Craftsman too.
Absolutey correct.QFT. I haven't purchased a Craftsman tool in a LOOOONG time. Why? The power tools are uninspired tools made under contract, or in many cases just re-badged versions of someone else's tool.
And the hand tools focused more on gimmicky robo-stuff and all kinds of "features" rather than quality at a low price.
Since I discovered that great tools at reasonable prices are not hard to find online, I have little to no use for Craftsman.
And what of that famous warranty? It's clear now it's only as valuable as the closest soon-to-be-bankrupt Sears store.
I prefer quality tools that need no warranty at all to cover a shortcoming of reputation or quality. Hard to find, yes...

Well that leaves Apex and Stanley making almost all the mass market tools. They are the InbevAB of the tool world.A couple months ago, it seemed like Stanley was the favored company to buy-out Sears. Then, all of a sudden Stanley decided to buy Newell's tool lines (Irwin, Lenox, etc) instead. So now, there doesn't seem to be a clear front-runner.
When thinking about someone buying Craftsman, I gotta wonder what someone gets in the deal? Craftsman outsources so much (manufacturing, design, etc), that there doesn't seem to be much there except for the brand names and trademarks. I really wonder exactly what someone gets when they buy Craftsman? It seems like there isn't much besides the intellectual property.
Not to mention, the asking price was rumored to be around $2 Billion dollars. Also, the rumors are flying around that Sears is about to fold. Potential buyers have to be thinking that they might be better off to just wait and buy Craftsman out of bankruptcy, in order to get a better deal.
Good thing SK was sold off by Facom first. Independence, bankruptcy and resurrection by Ideal saved a good company.The Craftsman name meant something back in the 60's and 70's. Growing up, that was the only tool line I knew and could afford. Lately, its become something of a joke and the internet has flooded the market with other hand tools that are better and less expensive. Stanley bought Facom from Fimalac for $494m and they received significant tangible assets. Not sure Sears will be able to get that much for the name.
I think craftsman hand tools will land on histories big scrap heap. To much liability for those tools already out there. Look for a catchy new name like maybe "Classman" to turn up after craftsman dies.
The independant stores only exist as long as Sears does. Do you think that they can sustain Kenmore by themselves. They are not big enough for Whirlpool and other suppliers to make a line just for them.I can see Sears die off but the Hometown stores live on with those three brands, Craftman, Diehard and Kenmore. (Sears's big three)
If the Hometown stores couldn't carry on with the Sears "big three" names, I could see and have mentioned it before that Menard's would be wise to ****** them up, as they would fit right into their current line up. If John Menard was smart, he'd buy it up and bring the hand tool line production back to the US of A. In buying the "big 3" might cost him some cash but it would give him a foot hold across the rest of the US where he may not have stores now but a Sears store exists. It might even bump Menard's ahead of Lowe's and right behind HD.
Lowes has Kobalt tools..........does Home Depot (or Menards) have a house brand hand tool line?
everyone on here wants to complain but no one has suggested that we band together as a gj limited partnership, post up a kickstater and raise enough money to buy cm and then make the tools in the us and honor the warranty. And we'll store all the inventory at harry epstein, and ask them to draw doodles on all the mail order packages.
I don't have all the details worked out yet, obviously.
Everyone on here wants to complain but no one has suggested that we band together as a GJ limited partnership, post up a Kickstater and raise enough money to buy CM and then make the tools in the US and honor the warranty. And we'll store all the inventory at Harry Epstein, and ask them to draw doodles on all the mail order packages.
I don't have all the details worked out yet, obviously.

Chen Yang Li Fortune Cookie and Tool Company
Craftsman tools matter
Everyone on here wants to complain but no one has suggested that we band together as a GJ limited partnership, post up a Kickstater and raise enough money to buy CM and then make the tools in the US and honor the warranty. And we'll store all the inventory at Harry Epstein, and ask them to draw doodles on all the mail order packages.
I don't have all the details worked out yet, obviously.
That is exactly what Ideal did when they bought the name and assets of bankrupt SK. Fellow GJers have posted that they are good to their word. The difference is SK was never the garbage that Craftsman has become. Ideal wants the good will of those customers. The higher quality and much smaller volume means there are a lot less claims. They even built a new factory and came out with new product as opposed to Craftsman that used a warranty as a substitute for quality.I can't imagine a warranty on previous tools remaining valid if the brand is sold/transferred. There's just no way someone would buy with that liability!
That is exactly what Ideal did when they bought the name and assets of bankrupt SK. Fellow GJers have posted that they are good to their word. The difference is SK was never the garbage that Craftsman has become. Ideal wants the good will of those customers. The higher quality and much smaller volume means there are a lot less claims. They even built a new factory and came out with new product as opposed to Craftsman that used a warranty as a substitute for quality.
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I have bought some new SK stuff, there is no comparison when looking at CM. SK is far and away better
No way IMO, will Walmart ever sell and support products with lifetime warranties.
Some people have said that the millions of tools still out there would be a liability, I'm not so sure.
Consumers do NOT care who owns the name ! Not upholding the warranty would be the "kiss of death".I can't imagine a warranty on previous tools remaining valid if the brand is sold/transferred.
Consumers do NOT care who owns the name ! Not upholding the warranty would be the "kiss of death".
ACE is the most likely to buy it, but their franchise stores do NOT have the floor space for the full line. That, and franchisees really don't want to deal with shipping the stuff back for credit.
Going all "Made in the USA" might be interesting, but Armstrong (one of the traditional Craftsman US suppliers) has been having their problems and I don't think there are enough customers that really care about COO.
IMHO, 50% chance NO ONE will buy it.
Interesting how for the last 5 years the guys on garage journal have correctly predicted Sears closing following the Christmas season.