On the other hand I do shop Harbor freight more than you might think. I am normally an excellent judge of tool quality and NEVER say that "you get what you pay for". Much of the really ultra high dollar stuff is just sucker bait. I know, I used to sell some of it. Good stuff with silly pricing. I say that you get the quality that you search out and learn to recognize. I do buy a LOT of tools at yard / garage sales. Most of the time that can be the best way to save a buck and still be able to buy quality stuff (if you recognize it).
The reason that I shop Harbor freight for some stuff is that there are a lot of tools that I buy that I rarely use and it seems kind of silly to me for me to put top dollar in a tool that I might only use twice and that does not have any special needs to be "special".

The drill press vise I posted to another thread is one example.
http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=31001
OK we are talking about $20 here. I would buy a better one for the metal shop where it would get a lot of stress and it might cost me $80. In the wood shop the $20 vise would be fine. If I buy the $20 one instead of the $80 one I now have $60 left to buy something else. If I do that enough times I can afford a new Shopsmith 530 using the money I didn't spend over-buying tools that have little need to be "special",

Now if I am going to be using something frequently I generally want it to be the best quality I can buy but I never use the price tag to decide if it is high quality or not.
I keep trying to help my son build his tool collection and a few years ago I bought him a low cost Tool Shop compound miter saw. I didn't put a lot in it because his need was not that great. I had already given him a good Shopsmith Greenie. A year later he decided to build a 26' x 32' addition to his house and to remodel the rest of the house. That Tool Shop saw did about 90% of the cross cutting on that work and he is still using it. It is just as accurate as it was when it was new. He just last month bought a laser light guide attachment for it.
For some guys it comes down to $$$. Either you buy a bunch of "decent" stuff at a low dollar amount and do woodworking or... You buy one $500 hammer and sit it out in the floor and look at it...
