Yep, back in the day you handed them a broken tool and they threw it in a box under the counter at the register and replaced it no questions. That was in Ft Smith, AR. and 21st and Yale in Tulsa.
Try the sears parts storeHave any of you ever needed to have a Craftsman tool replaced under their lifetime warranty? If so, how much of a pain was it? Did you just visit a dealer and go from there?
I have an old ratchet that has a bad friction ball and/or spring. I was hoping I could get a cheap repair kit and just keep the original ratchet, but the repair kits cost more than a replacement ratchet.
From the Snap-on website's Ts&Cs:I have never had a snap on man ask me for a receipt and I have ben dealing with them for 50 years!
Interesting to hear about the Snap on written policy; i guess it just depends on who you make contact with. It is ridiculous to require receipts on a lifetime item like a tool, esp given the past Craftsman practice of just exchanging without question. But I guess those days are long gone, for the most part.From the Snap-on website's Ts&Cs:
"To obtain warranty service contact the Snap-on Customer Care Center via telephone at 1-877-762-7664 or e-mail [email protected]. The following information will be required with the customer’s warranty request: (1) date and proof of purchase, (2) where customer purchased the product, (3) full name, (4) shipping address, (5) phone number, (6) e-mail address, (7) item number(s) or approximate weight of return package. Warranty requests that do not include all of the required information will not be processed."
Still easy. Lowes now handles Craftsman tools. They'll replace any tool they have currently in stock. I took in a cracked 18 mm socket last week. Exchange was quick and easy.Have any of you ever needed to have a Craftsman tool replaced under their lifetime warranty? If so, how much of a pain was it? Did you just visit a dealer and go from there?
I have an old ratchet that has a bad friction ball and/or spring. I was hoping I could get a cheap repair kit and just keep the original ratchet, but the repair kits cost more than a replacement ratchet.
There towards the end they were providing rebuild "kits" for the ratchet heads rather than replacing the entire tool which was another level of PITA.I do miss Sears sometimes. I never had an issue exchanging a tool that went bad, although I think it only happened once or twice with a ratchet.
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