Which is better craftsman or black and decker




















The Same part for a Sears product is often neither cheap or easy. Finally, Sears has been swirling the bowl for years, and now admits the obvious, they are unlikely to survive much longer. Now they sold their brands to others, but who knows what that means in the long run. I would put money on them building mediocre "Craftsman" products and hoping that they can sell to homeowners. I have no interest in getting caught up in that, never did have any interest in their power tools, and absent some seriously glowing feedback from professional users and reviewers, I doubt I ever will.

In my shop full of tools, the name Craftsman is strictly limited to wrenches, sockets, and related hand tools, which is a pretty good policy to follow. Drifterrider Handlebar Stache Posts: I haven't read the whole thread but: For hobby work or project work project work is as long as the tool makes it through the whole project , my first look is Harbor Freight.

I don't like battery tools, I prefer corded. They don't seem to have the problems battery tools seem to have. The above information is worth exactly what you paid for it.

Craftsmen for hand tools only. I had a few Rigids - burned out the motors on them. Arthur Burrows, the head of the Sears tool division, bought the Craftsman name from Marion-Craftsman Tool Company for just dollars. Today, Craftsman is known for making various lines of power tools of varying quality. Yes, that is right, one of the brands we are comparing today owns the other. The brand offers tools, work gear, and lawn and garden equipment. Craftsman is not a very large company, and at this time has somewhere around 1, employees.

That said, Craftsman made close to million dollars in sales last year. I completely agree with Sam. The trust is lost. Until tools are made in US, they have no chance of regaining my trust. Brand reputations have been so tarnished by all of the acquisitions, they mean nothing. It is just a repeat of what Sears did to us with the Craftsman brand. That was the end of the trust…Other brands now are following that dark road.

Brands on this chart may be more relative to their positions in the market and not necessarily relative to the positions of other brands on this chart. Maybe its sort of like the nearly company-killing confusion that GM and the other big 3 once had with car brands. The buying public thought they knew how to position Chevy versus Cadillac — but then where to put Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick and upstart Saturn was harder to figure out.

Then once they started rebadging what was essentially a small Chevy as a Cadillac Cimarron by just changing the trim — I think the buying public got more confused — probably even disgusted. That sort of thing tarnished an diluted the Cadillac brand. Maybe slapping the Bostitch name on Stanley tapes and the Dewalt name on some so-so hand tools does the same.

I think a lot of older woodworkers would agree in regards to the Porter Cable name. Once one of the highest brands in woodworking power tools, now competes with harbor Freight, and often gets beat. To be fair, the chart is intended for investors and analysts interested in the company in a stock market context, not enthusiasts or end users interested in their products.

Speaking of Craftsman hand tooks and positioning itself for the tradesman or professional; really? After seeing how they felt in my hand and compared to a Irwin model that was 3X the price, I left both pliers in the store.

Regardless, they could completely get rid of or shelve 3 or 4 of those. Perhaps they have sales data that supports keeping everything? I agree with the bottom 5 being OPP, honestly the bottom 6.

Those are all Wal-Mart names in my mind these days. How is it automotive or industrial? I always looked at Fat Max as a gimmick marketing name to sell bulky Stanley tape measures. Yet the vast majority of the public never knew there even was a step ladder. Most people I know thought Chevrolet was under Cadillac with basic car interior luxury amenities with simply a focus more on trucks and performance. And how could a Pontiac or Buick be over Chevrolet? Not Pontiac. Chevrolet built Suburbans, did Buick?

Then they dreamed up Saturn and within a few years it was nothing more than a badge slapped on existing GM vehicles. Heck, everything became that. Versus uses cookies to improve your experience on the site. By continuing to browse our site, you agree to our use of cookies. Privacy policy. Overview Prices Specs. Scroll down for more details. Is reversible. Which are the most popular comparisons?



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