Motorman55
Well-known member
Spoken by someone who's never been to Taiwan, I assume.
Yes I've been to Taiwan.
Spoken by someone who's never been to Taiwan, I assume.
If the tool is Made in the USA, you can bet the slogans will be obvious and everywhere on the packaging and tool itself. If you have to search for the COO on the packaging, then you can bet you'll eventually find something like China in the fine print. I've never seen a US-made tool in a store that wasn't trumpeting it's COO as loudly as possible in your face, and I've never seen a tool made in China that has COO in an easy-to-find area.
Also as Finn says, COO is on every package, maybe not on the tool. If you're buying used tools and think you're supporting American workers by buying only US-made used tools, then you're fooling yourself.
It’s on the package, so what’s the beef?
You’re not supporting anyone if you are buying used tools, except possibly the crackhead that stole them.
If it doesn’t say where it’s made
I just assume it’s full of chinesium and it’s Probabaly overpriced garbage
When looking for a decent tool, first rule is to see if it made in China. If it says "China" on the tool/package, put it back on the shelf and move on.
I can take Taiwan. For example: Right now I am looking for some good punches (pin, roll, solid, transfer). It's very hard to find one that is good and not ridiculously expensive. I was thinking Wilde (US made, price almost tolerable), but then another member said they weren't that great. At this point I'm just going to get the cheapest ones I can find that are not Made-In-China. Was going to just run by HF, but theirs are Chinese (some stuff there is Taiwan).
Huge double standard regarding China. Everybody likes their HF US General tool boxes but no way they would want to have a proudly made in China sticker and flag any where on their box.
I see no reason not to have the COO on every tool and and piece of shop equipment and should be required by law before something is allowed to be sold in North America
When looking for a decent tool, first rule is to see if it made in China. If it says "China" on the tool/package, put it back on the shelf and move on.
I can take Taiwan. For example: Right now I am looking for some good punches (pin, roll, solid, transfer). It's very hard to find one that is good and not ridiculously expensive. I was thinking Wilde (US made, price almost tolerable), but then another member said they weren't that great. At this point I'm just going to get the cheapest ones I can find that are not Made-In-China. Was going to just run by HF, but theirs are Chinese (some stuff there is Taiwan).
I thought it quite funny when Walmsrt( Everones buddy Sam) finally got nailed for their Chinese goodies with US inc stamps all over the place they quickly hand to replace with things like NASCAR to keep the crowd base coming.
Harbot freight really did it right with Fancy Names like Pittsbutg and Chicago which are soled as " quality USA tools" because the South Americans don't real labels.
OTOH a Jay Leno Walk-Questionnaire with the question ' where are Milwaukee and chicago Electric tools etc made" would be fun..
Reminds me of the good ol days when a ***** would buy a Pinto, Vega or a Pacer over
" Jap ****".......little did they know. My cousin still has my 75 Celica I bought new.Now it's had a couple paint jobs, interiors, trannny, engine rebuild but it's still a sharp lil car that corners like a GP car and gives a chirp when banging second......at 25 plus MPG
Now the South Koreans are eating everyone alive with all sorts of quality offerings.
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Meh. Much ado about nothing. As long as the COO is on the packaging so I can evaluate the purchase, then I sure don't care if COO is stamped on the tool.
Many companies other than China fail to stamp their tools ... Mexico, Taiwan, India ... I've even seen German and British tools that are unstamped.
And let's be honest ... the "made in USA" is not NECESSARILY a guarantee of quality. I've bought a few "made in USA" tools over the years that were junk.
Millions of Americans that work in manufacturing think it's a little more than much Ado about nothing.
Well, I agree, but that wasn't my point. I am just saying that as long as the COO is on the PACKAGING, then I can determine whether or not I want to buy the item. It doesn't matter whether or not the COO is on the actual tool.
Not really. Since most shopping is done online and most web stores don't show the COO on the packaging, the COO on the packaging doesn't help.
Not really. Since most shopping is done online and most web stores don't show the COO on the packaging, the COO on the packaging doesn't help.
Well, I agree, but that wasn't my point. I am just saying that as long as the COO is on the PACKAGING, then I can determine whether or not I want to buy the item. It doesn't matter whether or not the COO is on the actual tool.
That is a different issue if the web stores doesn't show COO in this listing...
Its pretty easy to ask the vendor what the coo is, if that is of importance to you.
Why make another regulation requiring the tool be stamped with coo? More proponents of big government and more regulation when it suits their purposes, I guess.
Most people dont care what the coo is, anyway. They just want utility and bang for the buck.