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I have bought a number of different tools from Harbor Freight and thus
far been satisfied with all of them. No, they are not the top end tools but all have been good value for the use intended. I see no reason to pay top end dollars for tools that will only receive light and infrequent usage. The engine hoist I paid $99 for has been just as good as one the guy in the hangar down from me paid over $250 for. That cheap ($199) tile saw I bought worked great and I later found that many professional tile installers use the very same saw. The air tools I bought have all performed upto expectations too. I will add though, I don't buy from their catalogue but from a local store which allows me to examine the tool before purchase. Bob Murray wrote: Their electrical tools don't seem to last very long. However............. Eleven years in the aviation industry, and everybody in the shop swore by: 1- Die grinders $9.95 to $14.95 vs Dotco, I-R, etc at $150.00 - Lasts just as long if you oil daily. 2- 6" digital caliper $14.95 vs Mititoyou at $79.95 and up - Just as accurate (checked with gage blocks) 3- Digital voltmeter, $4.95 with battery vs Fluke, etc.at $79.95 - Works fine, and you can't buy the batteries for the Fluke at that price. YMMV Bob wrote in message ... Someone wrote: 'YOUR OUT OF YOUR F**KING MIND' ...with regard to suggesting people buy ANYTHING from Harbor Freight. I disagree. |
#2
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I generally agree but I have bought unusable tools from HF. An example is a
tap and die set which contained taps and dies that didn't match any known thread, metric or SAE. As it happened, the one size I needed when I bought the set (M8 x 1.25) was useable. I discovered the bad ones when I had long since lost the receipt. Anyway, the set cost little more than a single tap from a machine supply company so I didn't lose more than the trip to HF. I decided that taps and dies need to be sufficiently accurate that they should be sourced from known reliable vendors even if at a higher price. Then there was the electric metal shear that disintegrated upon its first contact with sheet metal. The motorcycle was still warm from the trip to HF when that happened - they happily replaced the unit. I just lost two hours work. "BobR" wrote in message ... I have bought a number of different tools from Harbor Freight and thus far been satisfied with all of them. No, they are not the top end tools but all have been good value for the use intended. I see no reason to pay top end dollars for tools that will only receive light and infrequent usage. The engine hoist I paid $99 for has been just as good as one the guy in the hangar down from me paid over $250 for. That cheap ($199) tile saw I bought worked great and I later found that many professional tile installers use the very same saw. The air tools I bought have all performed upto expectations too. I will add though, I don't buy from their catalogue but from a local store which allows me to examine the tool before purchase. Bob Murray wrote: Their electrical tools don't seem to last very long. However............. Eleven years in the aviation industry, and everybody in the shop swore by: 1- Die grinders $9.95 to $14.95 vs Dotco, I-R, etc at $150.00 - Lasts just as long if you oil daily. 2- 6" digital caliper $14.95 vs Mititoyou at $79.95 and up - Just as accurate (checked with gage blocks) 3- Digital voltmeter, $4.95 with battery vs Fluke, etc.at $79.95 - Works fine, and you can't buy the batteries for the Fluke at that price. YMMV Bob wrote in message ... Someone wrote: 'YOUR OUT OF YOUR F**KING MIND' ...with regard to suggesting people buy ANYTHING from Harbor Freight. I disagree. |
#3
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Bill Daniels wrote:
I generally agree but I have bought unusable tools from HF. An example is a tap and die set which contained taps and dies that didn't match any known thread, metric or SAE. As it happened, the one size I needed when I bought the set (M8 x 1.25) was useable. I discovered the bad ones when I had long since lost the receipt. Anyway, the set cost little more than a single tap from a machine supply company so I didn't lose more than the trip to HF. I decided that taps and dies need to be sufficiently accurate that they should be sourced from known reliable vendors even if at a higher price. Then there was the electric metal shear that disintegrated upon its first contact with sheet metal. The motorcycle was still warm from the trip to HF when that happened - they happily replaced the unit. I just lost two hours work. There is no HF anywhere near me so I order online. I will not order anything that might require customer service based on personal experience. I bought a small Central Machinery lathe from them. It's a good machine, but any support I needed from HF was like pulling teeth. They sent me the wrong size key with a chuck. I contacted them via e-mail. Long story short: they only replied after I sent at least 3 e-mails per reply. Four months after initial request they finally sent me a new chuck key, wrong size again and never did respond to my complaint. When I attempted to get technical questions answered about the lathe I was asked for information about my shipping address and order number. That was the last actual response I received. The others were "we are working on it." They never did answer and seemed perturbed when I reminded them it had been over 30 days since I had last enquired. Littlemachineshop.com provides excellent support for the lathe and has better communications skills. They also ship faster than HF. The only things I will buy from HF are those I will not expect to ask for customer service on. I also don't ever recommend them as a source for anything more complex than screwdrivers. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
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