Originally Posted By: jcwit
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But you have to admit, most of their tools are Yugo's......
Wrong!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yugo's went into history because of poor quality, even with the low price.
Harbor Freight has done nothing but grow.
Show me another American tool merchandiser that has grown like Harbor Freight in the last 10 years.
So this tool, broken right out of the box is not an indication of sketchy off-shore QC variability?
Nope, definitely Snap-On quality right there.
The Ford, GM and Toyota companies of the tool world (using your example) would be Craftsman, SK, KD...etc. Good quality, good QC, and reasonably priced. No, not everybody needs Rolls/Snap-On.
But tools are a lot less complex than automobiles. There is a lot less to go wrong with the manufacturing process. Yet here we have an item that is CLEARLY junk that made it through QC. What if it had let go while in use and the one part of the arm embedded itself in the OP's eye socket? Where's the benefit of being cheap and buying junk in that scenario?
I
I cannot fathom the idea of supporting the philosophy that these bargain-basement priced knock-offs pedaled as tools are in any way "good". But I guess it goes hand-in-hand with the "everything cheaper" mentality in America. Nobody wants to actually pay money for good, or even reasonable quality. They'll just hop on down to China Freight and buy a $5.00 rip-off, and if it breaks, hey, they are only out $5.00. And if their car falls on them because their garbage tin-can jack-stands won't actually hold anywhere near their rated weight, then I guess that's OK too. Because they were only $5.00.
I'll stick by my example. The worst car I ever owned was a 1972 Camaro, purchased new no less, only kept it 4 months, did it keep me from buying other GM's or Chevy profucts. No, in a word. I also purchased (ordered) a new 1972 Corvette, owned a couple of Chevy Vegas "both served me well, both going over 100,000 mile mark" and another new Camaro in 1978. So in the end GM served me well.
So the person had a tool break, well name me the tool company manufacturer or distributor who has never had a tool fail with no matter the price of the tool, high or low end.
Buy what you wish, if you need to brag about how expensive your equipment is, so be it, it will make you feel better in your insecurity, if one is happy with saving some money thats fine also as long as the equipment does the job required.
I'm not bragging. And if you are going to make personal knocks, please learn to properly use the quote function. It makes your posts very difficult to decipher.
There is a significant difference between saving some money and buying the Craftsman ratchet over the Snap-On one and buying some off-shore piece of junk that breaks after a week of hard use.
I'm not knocking somebody for trying to save money, but you can save money and still buy good quality, name-brand tools manufactured in the USA by your fellow Americans. FWIW, 90% of my Snap-On stuff was manufactured in Canada by Canadians who are probably long dead.
I think there is a marked difference between trying to save money by buying something that is good, and will do the job, but not going overboard, and something that is marginal quality at best, but is dirt-cheap.