โFeb-16-2015 05:51 AM
โFeb-21-2015 06:51 PM
โFeb-21-2015 09:48 AM
โFeb-21-2015 06:29 AM
pnichols wrote:
Hmmmm ....: Why is it then - if quality coming out of China can be "all over the map" depending directly upon the specs of the company/distributor ordering the manufacture of it - that in contrast, products coming from Germany are almost universally of good quality?
Could it be that there is some kind of "national culture", or other related thing going on with the personnel and workers within the German industrial complex that helps quality along?
If there is ... then I prefer products sourced from such places with that magic ingredient that helps quality along. I'm not sure that the Chinese industrial complex contains the national culture, or whatever other things, necessary to put together products like Germany does ... regardless of the build-specs imposed.
โFeb-20-2015 06:29 PM
pnichols wrote:We lived in West Germany for a number of years. There was definitely a "national culture" - imagine everyone cleaning the sidewalk and street in front of their home, workers in factories having great pride in the quality of their work, etc. However, when the wall came down there was an influx of East Germans who had lived under socialism who lacked the "national culture". Germany is still working to regain their culture, but I doubt that it will ever return to what it was before.
Hmmmm ....: Why is it then - if quality coming out of China can be "all over the map" depending directly upon the specs of the company/distributor ordering the manufacture of it - that in contrast, products coming from Germany are almost universally of good quality?
Could it be that there is some kind of "national culture", or other related thing going on with the personnel and workers within the German industrial complex that helps quality along?
If there is ... then I prefer products sourced from such places with that magic ingredient that helps quality along. I'm not sure that the Chinese industrial complex contains the national culture, or whatever other things, necessary to put together products like Germany does ... regardless of the build-specs imposed.
โFeb-20-2015 05:52 PM
โFeb-20-2015 10:52 AM
mlts22 wrote:
I've found that it varies. For example, with 30A adapters, there are cheapies which burn out and get hot, but then there are the larger Camco ones (as well as their dogbones) which work well for a long time.
Some products, marine-grade is the only way to go. Especially when it comes to plumbing an electrical work. Costs more, but for items where the labor can mean many man-hours to get to the problem, it is worth it.
All and all product quality as a whole has suffered. I can compare tools from the '80s versus wrenches made now, and the differences are obvious. For tools which were "average" a few decades ago in quality, I'd have to buy MAC or Snap-on today to get the same fit/finish/material work.
Where Sears went wrong was losing their good name and offshoring. Once their products went from top tier US made goods to just another brand off the Chinese slowboat, people just went with cheaper stuff that was at the same quality tier, such as Home Depot or Lowe's house brands, or even the Harbor Freight specials.
Had Sears actually stayed with their "Sears Roebuck & Co." quality name and avoided the mass migration of good making to China, they might be still relevant today.
โFeb-20-2015 10:46 AM
โFeb-20-2015 10:38 AM
Bumpyroad wrote:down home wrote:
When they started losing money is when they started playing games, such as not repairing ratchets but replacing them with Chinese of inferior quality and no lifetime guarantee. .
Back when I was first using their ratchets, they would just exchange my trade in for a new one. then they started just giving me a replacement kit so I could rebuild mine. don't remember the last part of the quote however. If they were made in china I would "assume" that they were made to sears/craftsman specs. however.
bumpy
โFeb-20-2015 09:47 AM
โFeb-20-2015 05:26 AM
โFeb-20-2015 02:50 AM
down home wrote:
When they started losing money is when they started playing games, such as not repairing ratchets but replacing them with Chinese of inferior quality and no lifetime guarantee. .
โFeb-19-2015 04:00 PM
โFeb-19-2015 01:05 PM
โFeb-18-2015 06:48 PM
luckyscroller788 wrote:
I may be offtopic here, but one thing that really confuses me is :
Sears sold Craftsman tools for way longer than I've been alive. They were very high quality, and were made in the USA. They were not low price, but compared to others like snap-on, they were priced affordable I feel, making them a good value. Now, the majority, if not all the Craftsman wrenches and such are made in China. I do not know how their quality compares to the US made ones, but what I do know is their price has not gone down in the stores.So, by outsourcing the production to China,I can only assume the manufacturing costs went down substantially, the quality may have went down as well, and the profit margin for Sears went way up on the craftsman tools,and a******load of American workers are now unemployed because of it, and still, Sears is struggling to make a profit.
โFeb-18-2015 05:48 PM