ogorir wrote:when's the last time you bought craftsman? I've just been hearing bad things about the last year or so. they're definitely all coming from china now.
I actually bought a tap/die set from HF a while ago. the taps aren't that bad, for $12, but the damn tap handle broke, of all things.
I'd really like to get a decent set of everything, then replace the ones I break with good taps. MSC still has good taps, but you pay for 'em.
I've never liked those rethreaders. I'd much rather have a looser threadfit and use loc-tite than have the damn thing seize up on me again. I've also had issues with deforming the teeth on the dies. they seem to be made of softer alloy so they don't 'cut' .
Not recently. But I have looked at them (craftsman taps / dies) in the sears store shelves recently, and (aside from the "imported from wherever" notice on the package) they sure "look" to me to be as good as other high quality, made in USA taps I've purchased from stores such as fastenal recently and had the pleasure of using.
It's possible that looks can be deceiving, however there are some subtle hints that can tell you how much $ was put into manufacturing them by looking at them, IMO.
You can tell a quality difference in machine work (burr free, nice finish, etc) sometimes in a tap. The cheaper taps I have encountered IME, have much more ragged machine work, I've even encountered burrs in some really really cheap taps (maybe they are even lower than HF... perhaps it was an auto parts store product!) And you can feel the quality (or lack thereof) when using the tap - A quality machined, hard material tap works with less friction, and you can kind of feel the metal "peeling" away as the tap works. They are hard and durable metallurgy.
A crisp laser etching with plenty of identification info on the side of the tap also seems to be a good sign in the newer good quality made taps, IMO. (Of course any "made in USA" stamps also indicate good quality in a tap.) But I agree the craftsman taps & dies would be nice if they still had the "made in USA" on them and I certainly noticed they were no longer made in USA, but that would be my only possible reservation about them. I know it may be hard to believe, but theoretically it *should* be possible for an import tap to have good quality.
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon_e_wink.gif)
What counts (at least, to me) is how well they work.
The rethreaders I've used have been pretty hardened and durable, no problems with them yielding and I have abused them too. It is important to clean the grooves out when they get loaded up with grease/dirt cake though. A good, quick shot of aerosol can pressured brake parts cleaner through the plastic stinger tube aimed right at the groove seems best way I know of to try to blast junk out of the groove. Sometimes followed by compressed air, and repeated as many times as is necessary to get all the dirt out of each groove. The definitely need cleaning.
I just looked at my thread chaser set and found that they are indeed made in the USA... (maybe that's why they have given me good service?) here is what is on the box:
KASTAR HAND TOOLS
40-PC. RETHREADING SET
NO. 972
MADE IN USA