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#1
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RonB wrote:
Let me start by saying I am not trolling - I am curious. I am looking for opinions and if the subject bothers you, move on. We see lots of opinions regarding tool brands here and Craftsman sticks out. It appears as though our opinions on Craftsman power tools run from very supportive to downright venomous. Personally, as I read some of these posts I try to imagine who sent them - particularly in terms of experience and age. I am beginning to think some of the more disrespectful comments are coming from the older crowd who remember the power equipment Craftsman offered up until the early 80's. In fact some of us older geezers might still have 70's vintage routers, circular saws, sanders or other machines that are still serving us well. A lot of the maintenance on these old machines amounted to replacing power cords and brushes. We also remember when it took three guys to move their cast-iron winged table saws, drill presses or old jointers. My theory - Much of the venom is coming from older folks who feel betrayed by Sears and are just ****ed. Any truth to this? (BTW - this is aimed at power tools, not hand tools, sockets, etc.) I'm not old enough to know about the old stuff but have purchased a few new craftsman tools. I have bought my father 3 craftsman cordless drills in the last 10 years and still use my Makita purchased in 1995. I finally had to buy a new battery for it last year and when the third Craftsman drill dad was using died I wised up and bought a Makita like mine (got it from sears even). My Craftsman Professional router bought a couple years ago was anything but professional and caused much frustration and made me wonder what I was doing wrong when nothing would work right. When I went out and bought a PC router and pulled the bit out of the craftsman and placed it in the PC and it cut so much easier and smoother I was blown away, same exact bit just a different motor made a huge difference. |
#2
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Opinions/Flamecatcher - Craftsman Power Tools
Let me start by saying I am not trolling - I am curious. I am looking for
opinions and if the subject bothers you, move on. We see lots of opinions regarding tool brands here and Craftsman sticks out. It appears as though our opinions on Craftsman power tools run from very supportive to downright venomous. Personally, as I read some of these posts I try to imagine who sent them - particularly in terms of experience and age. I am beginning to think some of the more disrespectful comments are coming from the older crowd who remember the power equipment Craftsman offered up until the early 80's. In fact some of us older geezers might still have 70's vintage routers, circular saws, sanders or other machines that are still serving us well. A lot of the maintenance on these old machines amounted to replacing power cords and brushes. We also remember when it took three guys to move their cast-iron winged table saws, drill presses or old jointers. My theory - Much of the venom is coming from older folks who feel betrayed by Sears and are just ****ed. Any truth to this? (BTW - this is aimed at power tools, not hand tools, sockets, etc.) |
#3
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"RonB" wrote in message (BTW - this is aimed at power tools, not hand tools, sockets, etc.) Why not include the hand tools? They are not as good as the older stuff either. Actually, a lot of tools today are not as well made (durable) as they were years ago. Black & Decker used to be a respected name, Skil made its reputation with the circular saw for the masses; now it is a WalMart supplier. Sears made a decision to sell high volume at a certain price point. Some of their stuff is OK, but a lot is mediocre. Not knowing sometimes, I tend to avoid it all now. Yes, I remember when Craftsman was respected and used by real craftsman. Right along side B & D and Disston saws. Life changes. . |
#4
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I will also add that a lot of us older guys got started with Craftsman
because the tools were readily visible and available at Sears. This was before the local borg offered a dozen colors and brands under one roof. |
#5
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(BTW - this is aimed at power tools, not hand tools, sockets, etc.) Why not include the hand tools? They are not as good as the older stuff either. Ed - I held it to power tools because they seem to get the most comments with the group. I don't think their hand tools have suffered as much but their prices are too high. I get the same utility and warranty from Master Mechanic wrenches at 1/3 to 1/2 the price. I also agree that the same applies to B&D and others. Seems like Sears takes the brunt. |
#6
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On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 09:10:51 -0600, RonB wrote:
My theory - Much of the venom is coming from older folks who feel betrayed by Sears and are just ****ed. Any truth to this? I noticed the pattern. I agree. If we're not quite so old as to have Depression memories, we do remember the "greed is good" old days when lots of products, not just Craftsman, went down the tubes to MBAs with LBOs. RubberMaid ( Maybe Craftsman is getting heat generated by disgust at the whole phenomenon. -- "Keep your ass behind you" |
#7
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"RonB" wrote in message news:YP5jd.46225$EZ.38879@okepread07... I am beginning to think some of the more disrespectful comments are coming from the older crowd who remember the power equipment Craftsman offered up until the early 80's. I've reflected on this thought because I am in the right generation to remember. It was Christmas of 1973 when I was married, no kids and we both had good professional jobs. We were "rich" relatively speaking. I remember going through the sears catalogue and marking page after page of things I wanted for Christmas. My shop still has many of those items. The craftsman socket set and wrenches are still excellent. The chisels are so-so. Tap and Die set is still very good. The heavy duty hydraulic floor jack is still heavy duty but lost a seal and needs repair. But the power tools? Hmmm Corded Electric Drill - died after 7 years in a disgraceful gear failure - it should have lasted longer Autoscroll saw - still working well, but does not compare to what's available today Circular saw - does not hold a candle to power and smoothness of my Dewalt Pad sander - always was noisy and shook and generally horrible to use, but still "works" if I am in masochistic mood Variable high speed hand held grinder (Dremel tool on steroids) - Great tool, always was and still is. Bench grinder - works great but 7" non-standard wheels "iron" compressor - quit due to some part failure - gave it to a friend who fixed it for $15 and still going strong air impact wrench - like new and works well air ratchet - like new and works well What's this mean? I think Craftsman tools had an aura, but when I compare to what's available today, they were mediocre and some were very proprietary. I don't resent it - just got educated and moved on. Bob |
#8
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when lots of products, not just Craftsman, went down the tubes to MBAs
with LBOs. RubberMaid ( Clearly not confined to Craftsman. However, in my younger days Sears the borg stores were less common. For a young startup, Sears offered a good variety of tools and in a sense was a woodworking borg. Granted there were industrial and tool stores available but many of us hadn't discovered them yet.. |
#9
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Pardon error
However, in my younger days the borg stores were less common. For a young startup, Sears offered a good variety of tools and in a sense was a woodworking borg. |
#10
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Why not include the hand tools? They are not as good as the older stuff
either. Totally disagree. Craftsman sockets, etc. are made by the same company that makes Matco professional tools. Of course Danaher doesn't make all of Sears hand tools, so there could be some compromised quality in certain lines. My nickel's worth. Joe |
#11
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On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 09:10:51 -0600, "RonB" wrote:
Let me start by saying I am not trolling - I am curious. I am looking for opinions We see lots of opinions regarding tool brands here and Craftsman sticks out. It appears as though our opinions on Craftsman power tools run from very supportive to downright venomous. I am beginning to think some of the more disrespectful comments are coming from the older crowd who remember the power equipment Craftsman offered up until the early 80's. A lot of the maintenance on these old machines amounted to replacing power cords and brushes. My theory - Much of the venom is coming from older folks who feel betrayed by Sears and are just ****ed. Any truth to this? When I was growing up, and in fact, well into my marriage, Sears was always the first place to look for *anything*. So, powertools, hand held and floor standing were acquired from them when I took an interest in woodworking (around 1980). The tools I bought were acquired on a project by project basis. As my projects grew more and more ambitious, the limitations of the tools became apparent, and not only that, but *all* the hand held units either went up in smoke or were had a flaw so grievous as to set it aside since it was likely to spoil the work. Like the self adjusting router bit depth. To elaborate a bit on the "up in smoke" remark, I had a 1/3 sheet sander that did an excellent job of holding the paper (better than most new ones IMO) but the motor itself gave up when the insulation on the windings burned and began smoking. The same happened when a Craftsman circular saw I was using to rip 12/4 maple smoked so bad it simply stopped being able to cut anything. And my jigsaw's switch failed after only a couple of years of light use. I tended to avoid using it 'cause it was a case of lots of the proper noises, but not much on actual severing of wood fibers. What did I learn? The hand power tools are too lightly built and performance is marginal at best when used in a serious woodworking hobby. By serious, I don't mean making pukey ducks, I mean armoires, beds, tables & desks. Real furniture, not cub scout projects. However, the two floorstanding Craftsman machines I had were/are good. I replace the 6" jointer with a DJ-20, not because I became elitist, but because my projects are simply too large for the relatively short beds of that jointer. I still have and use the 10" cast iron top TS, albeit with lots of modifications like a Biesemeyer fence and link belt/steel pulleys. Perhaps without those modifications it'd be gone. The stock fence was so bad it had just about made me give up on the saw. I bought that saw around 1985. In the end, Sears' policy of selling to a low price point taught me to look elsewhere first for what I want. Some things I might still buy on price first, but when it comes to other things, like tools, I check the quality and performance first, price second. Price always plays a role in my decisions, but is tempered by the utility of the item. A cheap tool is no bargain if it can't reliably do the task at hand without failing in the process. This applies equally to brands like B&D and Skil. Craftsman is not alone in the "also ran" category in my shop. Serious projects need serious tools. |
#12
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Edwin Pawlowski did say:
Why not include the hand tools? They are not as good as the older stuff either. My only complaint with Craftsman hand tools is their thickness. Snap-ons will get into tight places that a Craftsman socket won't. Not that big of a deal for us amateurs, but for pro mechanics it's a real issue. Regarding durability; I think the pro tools are made from better alloys, but since they're thinner are about as durable as the good Craftsmans. The lifetime replacement warranty on any good tool kind of makes it a toss-up for durability. -- New project = new tool. Hard and fast rule. |
#13
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On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 09:10:51 -0600, "RonB" wrote:
Ah, where to start? I guess the first place is with the myth that Sears ever did make quality tools (I know Sears didn't make them, but for simplicity, let's just use the phrase). I have more than a little experience with Crafstman tools, and I know what I'm talking about. I grew up in a woodworking/DIY household and I remember many, many trips to Sears and visiting the tool department (9, for those of you who wonder how Sears numbers their departments). Compared to the sorry pieces of 3rd hand junk my father was using in his shop, some of those tools looked positively magnificent. Perspective jolt: this was in the '50s/'60s. I remember well the Christmas my mother bought my father a set of Craftsman power tools: saber saw (that's what we called a jig saw in those days), drill, sheet sander. Admittedly, they had steel bodies, but however robust they may have appeared, only one of them was still in his shop when I cleaned it out after he died, and I'm not sure it was working. I didn't even bother keeping it. At one time my shop looked like a Sears catalog. Stupid? No. In the '60s, '70s, and '80s there weren't the places to buy Delta, Powermatic, and Porter-Cable tools like there are now. Makita and Hitachi were still on the horizon. There was no internet. There were precious few magaizines advertising them. Shoot, where I lived you couldn't even buy hardwood. I never had a piece of real hardwood until I was 30. (I can hear it now: you had softwood? We WISHED we had softwood. We had to build bedroom suites out of cardboard and we were grateful.) I started out in 1972 with a Craftsman radial arm saw. Problems: well documented lack of stability in alignment. Cheesy table to frame attachment and fence clamp. My saw was one of the last with a solid cast iron column; they subsequently built them with bolt-together castings. It's waiting to be sold. Around 1973 I bought a Craftsman drill press. It was okay. In fact it had a couple of features that I really came to appreciate when it came time to look for a replacement, as most Delta/PM/Jet didn't have them: quill lock, light. That said, eventually some slop developed in the quill--not axially; vertically. I tried and tried and tried to figure out where it came from and how to fix it and couldn't I replaced it with a Delta 17-925...with a quill lock. If I had to, I could lift the Sears DP. The 17-925 is around 250 lbs. Around 1974 I bought a Craftsman bandsaw. Problems: pain in the butt one piece door that made blade changing tedious. Other than that this was actually not too bad a tool. I replaced it after nearly 20 years with a Delta 28-280. Same story as the one below about weight. It was impossible for me to get the saw up on the stand by myself without a block and tackle. And after a few times at the saw I could see there was a world of difference between the saws. A year later ('75) I bought a Craftsman jointer. I could adjust the gibs on the infeed table perfectly square to the outfeed table OR I could adjust the height of the table with the adjustment knob to change the depth of cut. In years of trying to reengineer the thing, and with a second table from Sears I was never able to make the thing work like it was supposed to. I could edge joint boards reasonably well, but forget about face jointing. If you think that Craftsman and Delta are even remotely equivalent, I could lift the Sears jointer up and down off its stand by myself with ease. I challenge you to try that with a DJ15, much less a DJ20. After initially building a lathe and never being satisfied with it, I bought a Craftsman lathe. It's okay, but my Jet mini lathe (acquired many years later) is twice the lathe, even at 1/3 the size. Also, in a common theme with other Sears tools, all the attachments are an odd size. Fortunately, that size is accommodated by most of the after market manufacturers, unlike some of the other odd size selections in Craftsman tools. Table saw. Here we get to the heart of the myth that Craftsman used to be something. My saw, obviously acquired used, is vintage 1955 or thereabouts. It is essentially the same saw with respect to table and innards as the saws sold right up to Emerson's ouster in the late '90s. The fence rail *looked* better and I always thought had been a long lamented victim of lowered specs to meet a price point until I actually had it. What a piece of crap. I later added an aftermarket fence which does a reasonable job. The trunnions are some sort of non-cast iron metal. I don't think it's quite pot metal, but then I'm not sure what that is anyway. They're nowhere, no way near as substantial as even contractor saws by other manufacturers, much less the redoubtable cabinet saws of Delta/Powermatic/Jet. And any thought of robust construction is dashed when you see and feel the sheet metal body that holds it all together. Again, I can lift the saw up and down off the base by myself, contrasted to the 400+ pounds of my Unisaw. The miter slot anomaly of the Craftsman is legendary. They use a .750" slot (with a .746" bar) where other manufacturers use a .750" bar in a ..755" slot. Sears advertises a "standard 3/8 x 3/4 miter slot", but it's only standard in Sears' saws. Belt sander. I can't remember when I bought this, but the tensioning mechanism is a ******* set up if ever I saw one. I have to reengineer the damn thing every time I change belts. Consequently, it doesn't see much use. If I needed a belt sander any more than I do, I'd junk this one and get a new P-C, Bosch, or Makita. Jig saw. I fought and fought with this piece of crap for years. The blades wouldn't stay straight and they wouldn't stay in place. Cuts were a crap shoot every time. I thought it was the nature of the beast (jig saw, not Craftsman) until I bought a Bosch. My god, what were they (Sears) thinking? Router. ARHA (Automatic Random Height Adjustment). Need I say more? I've been bitten so many times by it that I'm ashamed to admit it. When I started buying Bosch, P-C, Hitachi routers, I realized just how all encompassing the Craftsman lie is. Drill. Almost any other manufacturer's drills (except B&D) were more compact, smoother running, and more powerful than any Sears drill I ever had my hands on. Circular saw. Bulky, underpowered. Compared to my P-C 347 and my P-C SawBoss, Craftsman saws are a joke. Even my throw-away Skils were better. Folks, they are not tools that any true professional that depends on their tools for a living would tolerate for very long. They have gimmicks like lights on drills, and rack and pinions on routers that seem important to the uninitiated (they're not) but also mask other shortcomings. Flash, not substance. They are not good value, unless you consider them as one or two job throw away tools. Sure you can make them last longer than that, but do you want to? If you've never used Porter-Cable, or Makita, or Hitachi, or Bosch tools, you may think the Sears are adequate. They are not. No one can defend Sears tools by comparison to any of the "professional" grade tools such as P-C, Makita, Hitachi, Bosch, Delta, Powermatic, General, etc. If they try, it's because they've never used any of them. Now there will be some responders who will talk about their particular Sears tool that they've had for years and can't kill. Fine. Even a stopped clock is right twice a day. But if you want long term comfort, power, reliability, precision, suitablilty for the task, etc., avoid Division 9 at Sears like the plague. Craftsman is not, and never has been, any better than the current Black & Decker/Skil level of homeowner tools. The possible exception (particularly because I value Charlie Self's opinion) is the new Sears cabinet saw recently introduced. For me however, it's long been too little and too late. I will never, EVER consider a Craftsman tool in any way again. And, yes, that includes hand tools. I've completely replaced all of my Craftsman screwdrivers with Klein. What a difference. The Craftsman chisels are gone; replaced by Sorby. The wrenches are slowly being replaced by Husky which feel better and look better. One day, I will be truly Craftsman free. And they earned it. - - LRod Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999 http://www.woodbutcher.net |
#14
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On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 15:24:53 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski"
wrote: "RonB" wrote in message (BTW - this is aimed at power tools, not hand tools, sockets, etc.) Why not include the hand tools? They are not as good as the older stuff either. The lifetime warranty is still there, though- so it's not really as important that they are durable as it is with the power tools. Actually, a lot of tools today are not as well made (durable) as they were years ago. Black & Decker used to be a respected name, Skil made its reputation with the circular saw for the masses; now it is a WalMart supplier. Sears made a decision to sell high volume at a certain price point. Some of their stuff is OK, but a lot is mediocre. Not knowing sometimes, I tend to avoid it all now. Yes, I remember when Craftsman was respected and used by real craftsman. Right along side B & D and Disston saws. Life changes. . Aut inveniam viam aut faciam |
#15
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"Joe Bobst" wrote in message ... Why not include the hand tools? They are not as good as the older stuff either. Totally disagree. Craftsman sockets, etc. are made by the same company that makes Matco professional tools. Of course Danaher doesn't make all of Sears hand tools, so there could be some compromised quality in certain lines. My nickel's worth. That does not necessarily make then as good as the old ones. I have a set of box wrenches and still some of the original sockets that I got about 40 years ago. Bring your tools over and we'll compare them. I bet you'll want to leave with mine! |
#16
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Actually a more scathing review of the older stuff than I was expecting. I
do have a couple of the older hand power tools that keep going and a Craftsman drill press that will probably be sold at my estate sale. I, like you, used to just go to Sears when I needed a tool - no more. At the risk of starting a real flame, I believe they continue to go downhill. I am amused when I hear the new Craftsman "cabinet saw" compared to machines like the Unisaw or ever Griz 1023. Granted they must have a fairly substantial table to get them into the advertised 400 pound range. However, beneath the table there is little comparison. When I open the side panel on a Unisaw or 1023 most of what I see is cast iron trunnions and some of the motor and blade. Motor, blade and belts are very visible on the other. "LRod" wrote in message news On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 09:10:51 -0600, "RonB" wrote: Ah, where to start? I guess the first place is with the myth that Sears ever did make quality tools (I know Sears didn't make them, but for simplicity, let's just use the phrase). I have more than a little experience with Crafstman tools, and I know what I'm talking about. I grew up in a woodworking/DIY household and I remember many, many trips to Sears and visiting the tool department (9, for those of you who wonder how Sears numbers their departments). Compared to the sorry pieces of 3rd hand junk my father was using in his shop, some of those tools looked positively magnificent. Perspective jolt: this was in the '50s/'60s. I remember well the Christmas my mother bought my father a set of Craftsman power tools: saber saw (that's what we called a jig saw in those days), drill, sheet sander. Admittedly, they had steel bodies, but however robust they may have appeared, only one of them was still in his shop when I cleaned it out after he died, and I'm not sure it was working. I didn't even bother keeping it. At one time my shop looked like a Sears catalog. Stupid? No. In the '60s, '70s, and '80s there weren't the places to buy Delta, Powermatic, and Porter-Cable tools like there are now. Makita and Hitachi were still on the horizon. There was no internet. There were precious few magaizines advertising them. Shoot, where I lived you couldn't even buy hardwood. I never had a piece of real hardwood until I was 30. (I can hear it now: you had softwood? We WISHED we had softwood. We had to build bedroom suites out of cardboard and we were grateful.) I started out in 1972 with a Craftsman radial arm saw. Problems: well documented lack of stability in alignment. Cheesy table to frame attachment and fence clamp. My saw was one of the last with a solid cast iron column; they subsequently built them with bolt-together castings. It's waiting to be sold. Around 1973 I bought a Craftsman drill press. It was okay. In fact it had a couple of features that I really came to appreciate when it came time to look for a replacement, as most Delta/PM/Jet didn't have them: quill lock, light. That said, eventually some slop developed in the quill--not axially; vertically. I tried and tried and tried to figure out where it came from and how to fix it and couldn't I replaced it with a Delta 17-925...with a quill lock. If I had to, I could lift the Sears DP. The 17-925 is around 250 lbs. Around 1974 I bought a Craftsman bandsaw. Problems: pain in the butt one piece door that made blade changing tedious. Other than that this was actually not too bad a tool. I replaced it after nearly 20 years with a Delta 28-280. Same story as the one below about weight. It was impossible for me to get the saw up on the stand by myself without a block and tackle. And after a few times at the saw I could see there was a world of difference between the saws. A year later ('75) I bought a Craftsman jointer. I could adjust the gibs on the infeed table perfectly square to the outfeed table OR I could adjust the height of the table with the adjustment knob to change the depth of cut. In years of trying to reengineer the thing, and with a second table from Sears I was never able to make the thing work like it was supposed to. I could edge joint boards reasonably well, but forget about face jointing. If you think that Craftsman and Delta are even remotely equivalent, I could lift the Sears jointer up and down off its stand by myself with ease. I challenge you to try that with a DJ15, much less a DJ20. After initially building a lathe and never being satisfied with it, I bought a Craftsman lathe. It's okay, but my Jet mini lathe (acquired many years later) is twice the lathe, even at 1/3 the size. Also, in a common theme with other Sears tools, all the attachments are an odd size. Fortunately, that size is accommodated by most of the after market manufacturers, unlike some of the other odd size selections in Craftsman tools. Table saw. Here we get to the heart of the myth that Craftsman used to be something. My saw, obviously acquired used, is vintage 1955 or thereabouts. It is essentially the same saw with respect to table and innards as the saws sold right up to Emerson's ouster in the late '90s. The fence rail *looked* better and I always thought had been a long lamented victim of lowered specs to meet a price point until I actually had it. What a piece of crap. I later added an aftermarket fence which does a reasonable job. The trunnions are some sort of non-cast iron metal. I don't think it's quite pot metal, but then I'm not sure what that is anyway. They're nowhere, no way near as substantial as even contractor saws by other manufacturers, much less the redoubtable cabinet saws of Delta/Powermatic/Jet. And any thought of robust construction is dashed when you see and feel the sheet metal body that holds it all together. Again, I can lift the saw up and down off the base by myself, contrasted to the 400+ pounds of my Unisaw. The miter slot anomaly of the Craftsman is legendary. They use a .750" slot (with a .746" bar) where other manufacturers use a .750" bar in a .755" slot. Sears advertises a "standard 3/8 x 3/4 miter slot", but it's only standard in Sears' saws. Belt sander. I can't remember when I bought this, but the tensioning mechanism is a ******* set up if ever I saw one. I have to reengineer the damn thing every time I change belts. Consequently, it doesn't see much use. If I needed a belt sander any more than I do, I'd junk this one and get a new P-C, Bosch, or Makita. Jig saw. I fought and fought with this piece of crap for years. The blades wouldn't stay straight and they wouldn't stay in place. Cuts were a crap shoot every time. I thought it was the nature of the beast (jig saw, not Craftsman) until I bought a Bosch. My god, what were they (Sears) thinking? Router. ARHA (Automatic Random Height Adjustment). Need I say more? I've been bitten so many times by it that I'm ashamed to admit it. When I started buying Bosch, P-C, Hitachi routers, I realized just how all encompassing the Craftsman lie is. Drill. Almost any other manufacturer's drills (except B&D) were more compact, smoother running, and more powerful than any Sears drill I ever had my hands on. Circular saw. Bulky, underpowered. Compared to my P-C 347 and my P-C SawBoss, Craftsman saws are a joke. Even my throw-away Skils were better. Folks, they are not tools that any true professional that depends on their tools for a living would tolerate for very long. They have gimmicks like lights on drills, and rack and pinions on routers that seem important to the uninitiated (they're not) but also mask other shortcomings. Flash, not substance. They are not good value, unless you consider them as one or two job throw away tools. Sure you can make them last longer than that, but do you want to? If you've never used Porter-Cable, or Makita, or Hitachi, or Bosch tools, you may think the Sears are adequate. They are not. No one can defend Sears tools by comparison to any of the "professional" grade tools such as P-C, Makita, Hitachi, Bosch, Delta, Powermatic, General, etc. If they try, it's because they've never used any of them. Now there will be some responders who will talk about their particular Sears tool that they've had for years and can't kill. Fine. Even a stopped clock is right twice a day. But if you want long term comfort, power, reliability, precision, suitablilty for the task, etc., avoid Division 9 at Sears like the plague. Craftsman is not, and never has been, any better than the current Black & Decker/Skil level of homeowner tools. The possible exception (particularly because I value Charlie Self's opinion) is the new Sears cabinet saw recently introduced. For me however, it's long been too little and too late. I will never, EVER consider a Craftsman tool in any way again. And, yes, that includes hand tools. I've completely replaced all of my Craftsman screwdrivers with Klein. What a difference. The Craftsman chisels are gone; replaced by Sorby. The wrenches are slowly being replaced by Husky which feel better and look better. One day, I will be truly Craftsman free. And they earned it. - - LRod Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999 http://www.woodbutcher.net |
#17
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Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
"Prometheus" wrote in message The lifetime warranty is still there, though- so it's not really as important that they are durable as it is with the power tools. It is not very important if you round off the blade of one of your six screwdrivers. OTOH, if you break a socket removing the last head bolt on your enngine, it is 8:30 PM and the nearest Sears is 30 miles away, quality suddenly becomes very important. I have a duplicate of most hand tools in a tool chest in my garage and stuffed in a tool bag inside my truck so if one were to break I have a spare. |
#18
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However, let's put this all in perspective. We here on the wreck are not Sears' market. I had a discussion one time with a friend who was an occasional DIYer and who was talking about getting a jig saw to do some paneling. I had just gotten my Bosch and was extolling the virtues. He asked how much and when I told him $150 he blanched. He said he could buy a $30 saw, do a satisfactory job on the panelling and throw it away FIVE times for what I paid for the Bosch. I couldn't argue with him. He had no sense of what the feel of a quality tool in one's hand meant because it wasn't important to him. HE and those like him are Sears' market. Consequently, from our point of view, Sears will continue to go downhill. In-laws bought me a B&D jig saw. I have pulled it out twice in the 5 years attempted to cut something with it and put it away, the thing can't even cut straight so even though it was cheaper than a good saw it was a complete waste of money because its totally unuseable. |
#19
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On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 09:10:51 -0600, "RonB" wrote:
Let me start by saying I am not trolling - I am curious. I am looking for opinions and if the subject bothers you, move on. We see lots of opinions regarding tool brands here and Craftsman sticks out. It appears as though our opinions on Craftsman power tools run from very supportive to downright venomous. Personally, as I read some of these posts I try to imagine who sent them - particularly in terms of experience and age. I am beginning to think some of the more disrespectful comments are coming from the older crowd who remember the power equipment Craftsman offered up until the early 80's. In fact some of us older geezers might still have 70's vintage routers, circular saws, sanders or other machines that are still serving us well. A lot of the maintenance on these old machines amounted to replacing power cords and brushes. We also remember when it took three guys to move their cast-iron winged table saws, drill presses or old jointers. My theory - Much of the venom is coming from older folks who feel betrayed by Sears and are just ****ed. Any truth to this? (BTW - this is aimed at power tools, not hand tools, sockets, etc.) IMHO, you not only get what you pay for, but research is important, as we all see here with folks asking opinions here before buying.. This has ALWAYS been a key to buying Craftsman power tools, appliances, etc... (been buying there since they came out with ergonomic rocks to pound sticks with) Since they have never (afaik) made their own products, you have to know who makes each one for them.. I have a Craftsman biscuit joiner... go to sears.com and look at the picture... hmm... rack & pinion fence... I thought only Dewalt had that.... OH! I just got a sears 1/2" cordless drill.. might be skill, might be dewalt... no idea, since it was a present and I didn't shop for it, but the one I was going to get (3/8" at lower volts) was a Skill, not my favorite drill maker.. OTHO, my Orbital 1/3 sheet sander from sears is a skill, and I like it... I still have my over-worked sears router that either wife #1 or 2 gave me a LOT of years ago... don't know who made that, but it's still on it's original bushes and runs great.. As others have said, Sears and maybe Monkey Ward were the choices for most folks before Harbor Freight, Home Depot, etc., etc. changed the way people bought tools and hardware.. Maybe the bottom line is that a lot of the folks in the wreck are used to high end tools and you don't go to sears for high end.. |
#20
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On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 09:10:51 -0600, "RonB" wrote:
Let me start by saying I am not trolling - I am curious. I am looking for opinions and if the subject bothers you, move on. We see lots of opinions regarding tool brands here and Craftsman sticks out. It appears as though our opinions on Craftsman power tools run from very supportive to downright venomous. Personally, as I read some of these posts I try to imagine who sent them - particularly in terms of experience and age. I am beginning to think some of the more disrespectful comments are coming from the older crowd who remember the power equipment Craftsman offered up until the early 80's. In fact some of us older geezers might still have 70's vintage routers, circular saws, sanders or other machines that are still serving us well. A lot of the maintenance on these old machines amounted to replacing power cords and brushes. We also remember when it took three guys to move their cast-iron winged table saws, drill presses or old jointers. My theory - Much of the venom is coming from older folks who feel betrayed by Sears and are just ****ed. Any truth to this? (BTW - this is aimed at power tools, not hand tools, sockets, etc.) One of my advertising professors in the 60s described Sears as America's leading source of second-rate goods, including tools. And he was right -- in the 60s. Sears brands were never best quality, but they were adequate for the average woodworker. Back in the 50s my father bought a Craftsman table saw and that's what we used for years. Not spectacular, not super-accurate, but good, solid performance. By the time I started buying my own tools in the early 1970s this had changed significantly. I still bought a lot of Sears stuff (because I was stuck in the middle of 200 miles of stinking desert with a Sears store in town), but the quality had definitely deteriorated. By the 80s and 90s, fagetaboutit! One of the reasons for the outrage at Sears is that the company has been living off its reputation for the last 20 years. There are still a lot of people who think Sears is a good place to buy power tools because of word of mouth based on its old reputation. Consequently Sears still sucks in many of the ignorant. --RC That which does not kill us makes us stronger. --Friedrich Nietzsche Never get your philosophy from some guy who ended up in the looney bin. -- Wiz Zumwalt |
#21
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It is not very important if you round off the blade of one of your six screwdrivers. OTOH, if you break a socket removing the last head bolt on your enngine, it is 8:30 PM and the nearest Sears is 30 miles away, quality suddenly becomes very important. Yes but there are other hand tools out there that duplicate the Craftsman life time warranty and 1/2 the price - example is Master Mechanic. |
#22
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Eugene wrote in
: Edwin Pawlowski wrote: "Prometheus" wrote in message The lifetime warranty is still there, though- so it's not really as important that they are durable as it is with the power tools. It is not very important if you round off the blade of one of your six screwdrivers. OTOH, if you break a socket removing the last head bolt on your enngine, it is 8:30 PM and the nearest Sears is 30 miles away, quality suddenly becomes very important. I have a duplicate of most hand tools in a tool chest in my garage and stuffed in a tool bag inside my truck so if one were to break I have a spare. I have a spare truck. That doesn't make me any happier when something breaks, even if it were under warranty. |
#23
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patriarch wrote:
Eugene wrote in : Edwin Pawlowski wrote: "Prometheus" wrote in message The lifetime warranty is still there, though- so it's not really as important that they are durable as it is with the power tools. It is not very important if you round off the blade of one of your six screwdrivers. OTOH, if you break a socket removing the last head bolt on your enngine, it is 8:30 PM and the nearest Sears is 30 miles away, quality suddenly becomes very important. I have a duplicate of most hand tools in a tool chest in my garage and stuffed in a tool bag inside my truck so if one were to break I have a spare. I have a spare truck. That doesn't make me any happier when something breaks, even if it were under warranty. Years ago a local ford dealer was giving away a festiva when you bought a new f150. I suppose you could load up the festiva in the bed and have it for a spare to drive to the parts store if you ever had a breakdown. I have rarely had a craftsman took break, and then its usually a gimmick tool like the extension bar with a plastic quick release button and the plastic button broke so I traded it for normal one, or when I use a screwdriver as a prybar, but I usually don't have any problems with them otherwise. |
#24
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On Sun, 7 Nov 2004 00:00:34 -0600, "RonB" wrote:
It is not very important if you round off the blade of one of your six screwdrivers. OTOH, if you break a socket removing the last head bolt on your enngine, it is 8:30 PM and the nearest Sears is 30 miles away, quality suddenly becomes very important. Yes but there are other hand tools out there that duplicate the Craftsman life time warranty and 1/2 the price - example is Master Mechanic. The lifetime warranty isn't about quality; it's about actuary. - - LRod Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999 http://www.woodbutcher.net |
#25
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mac davis wrote:
IMHO, you not only get what you pay for, but research is important, as we all see here with folks asking opinions here before buying.. This has ALWAYS been a key to buying Craftsman power tools, appliances, etc... (been buying there since they came out with ergonomic rocks to pound sticks with) Since they have never (afaik) made their own products, you have to know who makes each one for them.. I have a Craftsman biscuit joiner... go to sears.com and look at the picture... hmm... rack & pinion fence... I thought only Dewalt had that.... OH! Craftsman biscuit jointer - $169.99 at Sears DeWalt biscuit joiner - $149.00 at Coastal Tools I'd would have bought the DeWalt. -- Jack Novak Buffalo, NY - USA (Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply) |
#26
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On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 18:13:21 +0000, LRod
wrote: The possible exception (particularly because I value Charlie Self's opinion) is the new Sears cabinet saw recently introduced. For me however, it's long been too little and too late. I will never, EVER consider a Craftsman tool in any way again. Maybe the machine wasn't set up properly, but one thing I noticed on this saw is that the left wheel seemed to be too far in from the front edge of the table. |
#27
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On Mon, 08 Nov 2004 01:27:11 GMT, Larry Kraus
wrote: And every time I change a bit, I wish they had a spindle lock that LOCKED and did not have to be held in while bracing the router against the torque of the wrench and keeping the bit at just the right position - I mean, I only have three hands! I hate spindle locks. I have upgraded every router I own that has them to a two wrench system. If you have three hands you are perfect for a spindle lock. Otherwise, as far as I'm concerned, I think they are the work of the devil. - - LRod Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999 http://www.woodbutcher.net |
#28
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On Sun, 07 Nov 2004 12:12:41 -0500, Nova
wrote: mac davis wrote: IMHO, you not only get what you pay for, but research is important, as we all see here with folks asking opinions here before buying.. This has ALWAYS been a key to buying Craftsman power tools, appliances, etc... (been buying there since they came out with ergonomic rocks to pound sticks with) Since they have never (afaik) made their own products, you have to know who makes each one for them.. I have a Craftsman biscuit joiner... go to sears.com and look at the picture... hmm... rack & pinion fence... I thought only Dewalt had that.... OH! Craftsman biscuit jointer - $169.99 at Sears DeWalt biscuit joiner - $149.00 at Coastal Tools I'd would have bought the DeWalt. you being the authority, I'll have my wife take back her present and get me the dewalt.. this of course has a lot of bearing on the topic, right? |
#29
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On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 22:27:12 +0000, Eugene
wrote: Edwin Pawlowski wrote: .. I have a duplicate of most hand tools in a tool chest in my garage and stuffed in a tool bag inside my truck so if one were to break I have a spare. ============== I already posted my comments on Craftsman power tools... BUT I also restore, drive, and repair old cars as a hobby... I have roll around tool boxes in both of my garages so I too have duplicate wrenches,sockets etc ...and 90 percent of my hand tools are Craftsman... However every single one of my sockets and swivels etc that I use with my air tools are Snap On.... learned long ago that Craftsman Impact sockets just do not hold up...even with their free replacement warranty you will no longer find any in my tool chests... A few weeks ago I could not find my 3/8 inch "pair" of line wrenches when I was installing brake calibers on one of my cars and had to run into Sears . needed 2 and paid $18.95 EACH double ouch!..was expecting $ 5.99.... shows you how much I know about tool costs today... Anyway Son Number two had both of my 3/8 inch line wrenches in his garage ...told me he was sorry that he did not return them LAST YEAR after he borrowed them... Guess what I plan on letting him keep for Christmas this year... Bob Griffiths |
#30
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My theory - Much of the venom is coming from older folks who feel betrayed by Sears and are just ****ed. Any truth to this? ======================== I am in my 60's so I guess I am qualified as an older guy.... I ahev also NOT read a single reply to your post...(yet) I would NOT under any circumstances open my wallet for any Craftsman power tool manufactured after 1975 ....PERIOD ! Having said that I equipted my shop in the mid to late 60's and almost every tool I bought was Craftsman.... (sears Credit what can I say) Anyway I still have my original floor model drill press and it has absolutely been a workhorse ...replaced the belt once in all that time and more then a few light bulbs...but nothing else... I still have my original Radial Arm Saw that I now use only as a cut off saw... but its fine ...have not moved it off 90 degress in 25 years or so.... My 6" belt/disk sander still works just fine...although I have had to play with the tracking mechanism more times then I care to admit and I can not remember the last time I even had a disk on the the thing...little or no need for it for my projects... I also still use my 12 inch Band Saw too....BUT I am not about to claim that it is anything more then marginal at best... does what I want but does need to be replaced with something larger and more powerful...timberwolf blades make it marginal... Gone FOR years are my original Lathe, Table saw, & Jointer All were marginal at best... (this was 60's equiptment BTW ) I do not feel I was betrayed by Sears....(well it would be nice if they still had repair departments in their stores or would sell you a 3 dollar belt without charging you 15 bucks to ship it... )... Just my opinion... Bob Griffiths .. |
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