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Gould 0738
 
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Default What Spare Parts Do You Carry?

I understand it. Good tools are expensive and are usually regarded as
a long term investment. Boat tools get subjected to a LOT of abuse
because they are stored in a hot humid environment,


There are many grades of tools.

Crap tools have no place on a boat, but not everything less than sockets that
sell for $15 each has to be a crap tool.

I just junked my "backup" socket sets this spring. Checked the boxes, and
everything was corroded, the ratchets didn't give me any confidence at
all........and too bad, too. I think I paid $20@ for the two, (1 metric and 1
SAE).

Other socket set was about $100. Not particularly expensive and nowhere near
top of the line, but it is holding up very well.

I don't know that I'd get any better results
with Snap-on or some other highly regarded name brand tool.....(some people
might, but my own mechanical skills are
only moderate to begin with).

Craftsman tools, from Sears, always seemed to be a good compromise between
affordability and durability. Is this still the case, or has it changed?


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Greg
 
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Default What Spare Parts Do You Carry?

I keep my tools in an ammo can, occasionally I spray some oil in there. My
Crafstman, Snap-on or MAC tools are doing fine. That is on a boat that sees 300
hours a year on salt water, stored on a lift over salt water when it isn't in
it and I am not a maintenance fanatic.
I haven't had to do it lately but I know you used to be able to take a twisted
up, rusty old Crafstman tool back to Sears and they would give you a new one.

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Greg
 
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Default What Spare Parts Do You Carry?

Crafstman

Obviously I am not a spelling fanatic either sorry.
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Garth Almgren
 
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Default What Spare Parts Do You Carry?

On 6/4/2004 9:49 AM, Greg wrote:

I haven't had to do it lately but I know you used to be able to take a twisted
up, rusty old Crafstman tool back to Sears and they would give you a new one.



They still do. That's one great thing about Sears; they stand behind
their Craftsman handtool warranty. A couple years ago I squeezed too
hard on a rusty pair of Craftsman pliers and broke a handle off, and
they replaced it. My uncle took back a 25+ year old Craftsman socket
that he had cracked by over-torquing, and they replaced it.

In both cases, all they did was verify that it was a genuine Craftsman
handtool. Other than that, no questions asked.


--
~/Garth - 1966 Glastron V-142 Skiflite: "Blue-Boat"
"There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing
as simply messing about in boats."
-Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows


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