If it sounds to good to be true

Create a review for a woodworking tool that you are familiar with (Shopsmith brand or Non-Shopsmith) or just post your opinion on a specific tool. Head to head comparisons welcome too.

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dusty
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Post by dusty »

stumpbuster wrote:The other day I found a coupon from Harbor Freight for 12 inch clamps maximum 7 per customer at $1.99 per clamp. Eureka the deal of the year:D After trucking 25 mi Thur las Vegas traffic (one way). I found the clamps also picked up some other shop essentials. You can always find essentials at harbor freight.
Now I am home and try one of the clamps the squeeze handle breaks off.:eek: I think to myself "WOW I must be strong cool".
Now I am helping the 8 year old neighbor girl fix her doll house, hand her one of my brand new Harbor Freight clamps and she breaks the squeeze handle off.
Just saying you get what you pay for. :mad:
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Don't discard the plastic pads. They might fit on some of your other clamps.:rolleyes:
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shipwright
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Post by shipwright »

I bought one of these for the $1.99 price. Wanted to buy more but they only had one. When I got it home I realized why that one was not sold. There is a simple design failure. I will use my rain check and go back and get some more however because I can't find a clamp that good for $2.25 ($1.99 + $.26 for the bolt) anywhere else.

For $2.25 it's a very good light duty clamp.

Apparently I'm not the only one who has done this (link previously posted)

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Paul M
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Paul M ........ The early bird gets the worm but the second mouse gets the cheese
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fiatben
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Yuuup

Post by fiatben »

I agree with Paul, make the simple modification and they make a pretty good cheapo light-duty clamp for the money. But only if you catch them on sale. Now that I've read everyone else's fix, that sounds more like what I did. I just know that replacing one piece (the bolt) made it much better than the ones I haven't fixed yet.
'55 Greenie #292284 (Mar-55), '89 SS 510 #020989, Mark VII #408551 (sold 10/14/12), SS Band Saw, (SS 500 #36063 (May-79) now gone to son-in-law as of 11-11), Magna bandsaw, Magna jointer 16185 (May-54), Magna belt sander SS28712 (Dec-82), Magna jigsaw SS4397 (Dec-78), SS biscuit joiner, Zyliss (knockoff) vise, 20+ hand planes, 60s Craftsman tablesaw, CarbaTec mini-lathe, and the usual pile of tools. Hermit of the Hills Woodworks, a hillbilly in the foothills of the Ozarks, scraping by.
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trainguytom
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Post by trainguytom »

HF has its place in my woodworking scheme. I don't need any big woodworking tools...that's what Shopsmiths are for, but I've used some of their stuff with good success. For example, I bought one of their $12 moisture meters & did a side by side test with a friend's Wagner pinless $400 meter & the readings were nearly identical. He was a little jealous.
I have used their cordless drills over the years & at about $15 (with 20% off coupon) am happy. When the battery no longer takes a charge, I'll toss it. The previous HF drill outlasted Black & Decker that was much more expensive.
I'm not saying they're great for all stuff, but they've been good for me many times & if there's a problem, they always have taken care of it, no questions asked.
My dad's 1951 10er, 2 more 10er's, same vintage, a Goldie MK5, a 510 shortie with 34inch tubes, bandsaw, jointer, jigsaw, belt sander, a ton of small SS goodies and still looking...you just can't have enough Shopsmith stuff
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JPG
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Clamp fix details ala jpg

Post by JPG »

Took a couple pix to illustrate what I posted earlier.

Main difference between what I did and others(bolt) was the inclusion of a spacer as a 'bearing' and tapped holes.

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╔═══╗
╟JPG ╢
╚═══╝

Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10
E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
dforeman
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Post by dforeman »

I've always found HF to be either a hit or miss on tools. Sometimes they have some decent stuff and sometimes it is junk (over the holiday's I bought some stronghold brand clamps there at a good price). Last year it took them over 9 months to get in a stand that I was looking to purchase. You just have to look closely at the item and determin if it fits your needs/price. And, then of course the big issue would be if they have any in stock or not. They almost always seem to have a stocking problem.
foxtrapper
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Post by foxtrapper »

Hadn't broken the handles off of those, but I've never found them to clamp too tightly. They slip easily on the bar, and won't pull up nearly as tight as say the Irwin clamps.

Avoid their plastic spring clamps! Nasty habit of exploding or shattering in use. The sharp and hard bits of plastic get launched hard when these clamps fail.
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mrhart
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Post by mrhart »

stumpbuster wrote:The other day I found a coupon from Harbor Freight for 12 inch clamps maximum 7 per customer at $1.99 per clamp. Eureka the deal of the year:D After trucking 25 mi Thur las Vegas traffic (one way). I found the clamps also picked up some other shop essentials. You can always find essentials at harbor freight.
Now I am home and try one of the clamps the squeeze handle breaks off.:eek: I think to myself "WOW I must be strong cool".
Now I am helping the 8 year old neighbor girl fix her doll house, hand her one of my brand new Harbor Freight clamps and she breaks the squeeze handle off.
Just saying you get what you pay for. :mad:
[ATTACH]15855[/ATTACH]

The same experience as you and it looks like everybody else. I use them for stop block clamps or latley to test fit a box joint project where you don't need alot of pressure yet and the plastic is good on the surface.
R Hart
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fjimp
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Post by fjimp »

I want to hear a success story from someone attempting to return faulty goods to harbor freight. My only experience had me leaving the store with steam shooting from my ears. Jim
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cincinnati
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Post by cincinnati »

fjimp wrote:I want to hear a success story from someone attempting to return faulty goods to harbor freight. My only experience had me leaving the store with steam shooting from my ears. Jim
What had you steamed?

I've had no problem with a return at all. Walked in with my receipt, walked out with money in hand.
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