Sears Craftsman Tools Now Made in China, You kidding me? What's next?

from now on sjjr's new name is "all talk"
Folks, look at this sheet, Karmat here makes a stupid ass post and Frenchy(Sho Sho) thanks him and basically kisses his ass, like he would want to bend over backwards for his butt buddy Karmat. These two are real examples of what happens when people get dumbed down in school, they have this stubborn Socialistic tunnel vision, and I likes that because I use superior Strategery to dismantle their pin-headed posts, piece by piece. Folks, just read this entire thread and you will see how it is done, that is if you do not first piss your pants from laughing so hard. I thrive on cyber dismantling these types of mentally challenged posting pieces of work, Mods or no Mods, it is what it is, I pity the fools and I kinda pity this Forum if this is some of the best they gots.....Victory is sweet....LOL...bring it, come on, I wanta kick some moore Commie booty.....OMyass
 
Your question was answered in the first sentence. The rest was aimed at those here who know what tools are, who use tools, and who might be interested in knowing that all 'Made In China' products are not the same.

As well, it served as an informative offering to those who might be purchasing tools in the near future, and needed some free advice from one who puts thousands of hours/year on a number of different tools.

Now, if your attention span is too short to wade through all the information, put me on ignore.

Your first sentence was a rambling dialogue that could not be mistaken as an answer to my question.

But being a dishonest partisan hack is your forte' so I should not be shocked by your inability to honestly answer anything.

Carry on.
 
I am really torn now...I love "Sho Sho"...it sounds like a poodle which does remind me of Billy

OTOH, I love Butt-Boy Billy too.

And then someone else said Billy reminds them of Fee Fee the French Poodle.

I suppose I will have to vacillate between them all!
 
Post a photo of your knife with one of your thumbs in the photo next to the knife, like I had to do on the old Board to shut the Demo skeptics up, in this case I need to see a thumb because I do not trust either you Karmat or Sho Sho no more. It is obvious that I mentally own both of you and after I see the your knife photo, I will post one of my kitchen knife collection with my thumb in it to show good faith. In other words, Sho me yours and I will Sho you mine. The fact that no name is on your knife probably means that is was a reject second that they were ashamed of selling, probably a Chinese Junk knife with a thick blade to keep it from breaking, not many no-name knives around. I have a great older 440C Buck 110, made in San Diego that I could thumb shot post along with a razor sharp Kabar, made in Olean, NY. I must have at least 50 knives in my collection that I could thumb shot photo post, but you need to post a thumb shot photo first of your nameless knife or the deal is off. I also have an 1832 caplock pistol with the date and name of Samuel Colt on it, that I could thumbshot post, but you have to go first or you will see nothing. There, if you do not post the thumbshot photo first, you will lose all credibility on this Forum and because of Sho Sho's close association with you, he/she is in the same boat. The ball is in your court, now do your thing, Karmat.

Gonna answer my question Mr. Expert? What's the OAL for a 7.62x39 cartridge and what does it headspace on?
 
Gonna answer my question Mr. Expert? What's the OAL for a 7.62x39 cartridge and what does it headspace on?
The headspace is the distance from the back of the cartridge to the front of the closed bolt, when the cartridge is in place ready to shoot. While firing a gun many times, the cartridge keeps pressing/recoiling against the bolt until the headspace increases to a point where the back of the cartridge actually accelerates towards the bolt, almost like a bullet, very dangerous. I had an early Arisaka Japanese rifle with the airplane lead sights and I took it to Bolsa Gunsmithing in Orange County CA, he test fired it, measured the headspace and told me that the steel was soft and the headspace was too large, and it was too dangerous to shoot. They also have gauges that when inserted and the bolt is closed, tell the headspace.....next good shooter, this one done ran out of ammo

PS, hey Sho Sho, I bet that you have a lot of headspace because your brain has shrunk from atrophy because you never use it..........LOL.....Sho Sho needs to give up, surrender, raise the white flag like all the other Frenchies have done.....
 
The headspace is the distance from the back of the cartridge to the front of the closed bolt, when the cartridge is in place ready to shoot. While firing a gun many times, the cartridge keeps pressing/recoiling against the bolt until the headspace increases to a point where the back of the cartridge actually accelerates towards the bolt, almost like a bullet, very dangerous.
So what does it HEADSPACE ON? It's a simple question? Are you too stupid to answer a simple question?
I had an early Arisaka Japanese rifle with the airplane lead sights
Type 99's are late war rifles, not early.
and I took it to Bolsa Gunsmithing in Orange County CA, he test fired it, measured the headspace and told me that the steel was soft and the headspace was too large, and it was too dangerous to shoot.
Your friend is a retard, as the Arisaka is the strongest rifle action ever designed, it can take loads in excess of 100,000Psi.
They also have gauges that when inserted and the bolt is closed, tell the headspace.....next good shooter, this one done ran out of ammo
So what does teh CARTRIDGE headspace on you simpleton? What is the OAL? These are REALLY simple questions and yet you can't answer them. Some 'expert' you are.
 
So what does it HEADSPACE ON? It's a simple question? Are you too stupid to answer a simple question? Type 99's are late war rifles, not early. Your friend is a retard, as the Arisaka is the strongest rifle action ever designed, it can take loads in excess of 100,000Psi. So what does teh CARTRIDGE headspace on you simpleton? What is the OAL? These are REALLY simple questions and yet you can't answer them. Some 'expert' you are.
Wrong again, as the war progressed the quality of the steel degraded and they were never as good as the British Enfield of which I had one and fired many times. The proof is that my Arisaka had too much headspace, as determined by a gunsmith. The Nambu was also a piece of crap.......

......"Type 99[edit]Main article: Type 99 rifle
Successor to the Type 38 rifle. Chambered in 7.7×58mm Type 99, later rimless variants of the Type 92 and 97 cartridges also usable.

....."Designed in 1939, then produced and fielded from 1941 to 1945, the Type 99 was the most common Imperial Japanese service rifle of World War II and second most produced Imperial rifle with 2,500,000 built. Significant changes are the improvement of the rear sight form transitioning from a V-notch type like those on a Type 38, to an aperture, the front sight blade was renewed to a triangular shape, chrome-lined barrels were used, and on earlier productions, the rear sight was equipped with anti-aircraft calipers.

Sub-variations included a long rifle (approximately only 38,000 made), and short rifle; former being 1258 mm in total and latter being 1118 mm. The short rifle also varied in quality from initial, intermediate, to last-ditch".....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arisaka

The Type 99 is one of the strongest military bolt rifles ever made,[4] but many late-war ("last ditch") rifles used lower quality parts, and a complete lack of finish, as well as shortcuts taken to ease production. The "last ditch" rifles are usually distinguished by their crudeness; poorly finished stock, wood buttplate, very obvious tooling marks in the metal, rudimentary sights and an unfinished bolt knob and handle. Such late war rifles may be unsafe to fire.

In some cases, these rifles may actually be training rifles intended for firing blank cartridges only. The training rifles were made of mild steel and were never intended for ball ammunition. It is possible that reports of Type 99 rifles blowing up were simply the results of soldiers testing captured weapons. Unaware that they were using drill rifles, they fired ball ammunition in them with poor results and possible injuries. It is possible that this may have unjustly led to the Arisaka having a reputation (at least for the last ditch rifles) for being of poor construction".......
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_99_rifle
 
Wrong again, as the war progressed the quality of the steel degraded and they were never as good as the British Enfield of which I had one and fired many times. The proof is that my Arisaka had too much headspace, as determined by a gunsmith. The Nambu was also a piece of crap.......

......"Type 99[edit]Main article: Type 99 rifle
Successor to the Type 38 rifle. Chambered in 7.7×58mm Type 99, later rimless variants of the Type 92 and 97 cartridges also usable.

....."Designed in 1939, then produced and fielded from 1941 to 1945, the Type 99 was the most common Imperial Japanese service rifle of World War II and second most produced Imperial rifle with 2,500,000 built. Significant changes are the improvement of the rear sight form transitioning from a V-notch type like those on a Type 38, to an aperture, the front sight blade was renewed to a triangular shape, chrome-lined barrels were used, and on earlier productions, the rear sight was equipped with anti-aircraft calipers.

Sub-variations included a long rifle (approximately only 38,000 made), and short rifle; former being 1258 mm in total and latter being 1118 mm. The short rifle also varied in quality from initial, intermediate, to last-ditch".....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arisaka

The Type 99 is one of the strongest military bolt rifles ever made,[4] but many late-war ("last ditch") rifles used lower quality parts, and a complete lack of finish, as well as shortcuts taken to ease production. The "last ditch" rifles are usually distinguished by their crudeness; poorly finished stock, wood buttplate, very obvious tooling marks in the metal, rudimentary sights and an unfinished bolt knob and handle. Such late war rifles may be unsafe to fire.

In some cases, these rifles may actually be training rifles intended for firing blank cartridges only. The training rifles were made of mild steel and were never intended for ball ammunition. It is possible that reports of Type 99 rifles blowing up were simply the results of soldiers testing captured weapons. Unaware that they were using drill rifles, they fired ball ammunition in them with poor results and possible injuries. It is possible that this may have unjustly led to the Arisaka having a reputation (at least for the last ditch rifles) for being of poor construction".......
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_99_rifle
I claim the victory over Sho Sho and Karmat. They came on here and tried to bully me because they are Mods, but I showed them where the wild goose goes by standing up to them and defeeting them by attacking their weaknesses, weaknesses like not playing with a full deck, and basic ignorance. You have heard the term Pinheaded fools, well if the shoe fits. The only thing that they got out of this confrontation with me were new names, "Sho Sho" and "Karmat". Next time I post, they will think twice about attacking me, because they did not like having their asses handed to them on every post reply, a total domination of them by yours truly, I rest my case, let our guests be the judges......
 
Wrong again, as the war progressed the quality of the steel degraded and they were never as good as the British Enfield of which I had one and fired many times. The proof is that my Arisaka had too much headspace, as determined by a gunsmith. The Nambu was also a piece of crap.......
You say this but then...
The Type 99 is one of the strongest military bolt rifles ever made,[4] but many late-war ("last ditch") rifles used lower quality parts, and a complete lack of finish, as well as shortcuts taken to ease production. The "last ditch" rifles are usually distinguished by their crudeness; poorly finished stock, wood buttplate, very obvious tooling marks in the metal, rudimentary sights and an unfinished bolt knob and handle. Such late war rifles may be unsafe to fire.

In some cases, these rifles may actually be training rifles intended for firing blank cartridges only. The training rifles were made of mild steel and were never intended for ball ammunition. It is possible that reports of Type 99 rifles blowing up were simply the results of soldiers testing captured weapons. Unaware that they were using drill rifles, they fired ball ammunition in them with poor results and possible injuries. It is possible that this may have unjustly led to the Arisaka having a reputation (at least for the last ditch rifles) for being of poor construction".......
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_99_rifle

Go on to prove that I am in fact correct. Thanks for that, saves me the trouble of having to do it.
 
I claim the victory over Sho Sho and Karmat. They came on here and tried to bully me because they are Mods, but I showed them where the wild goose goes by standing up to them and defeeting them by attacking their weaknesses, weaknesses like not playing with a full deck, and basic ignorance. You have heard the term Pinheaded fools, well if the shoe fits. The only thing that they got out of this confrontation with me were new names, "Sho Sho" and "Karmat". Next time I post, they will think twice about attacking me, because they did not like having their asses handed to them on every post reply, a total domination of them by yours truly, I rest my case, let our guests be the judges......

Still can't answer a simple question about the 7.62x39 can you? What does the cartridge headspace on and what is the max OAL? If you can't answer that then you don't know shit about firearms. It's that simple.
 
Still can't answer a simple question about the 7.62x39 can you? What does the cartridge headspace on and what is the max OAL? If you can't answer that then you don't know shit about firearms. It's that simple.
This is my thread, therefore I feel obligated to get the last word in. If you reply to this, I will reply to your reply until you stop replying...infinity. You are a Mod, and if you want to run this thread up into the 1000's then keep replying, and that would be your choice as a Mod, not mine. Damo might have something to say about useless BS being posted by you, since I will not stop replying on my own thread. Sheet I feel like I am scolding you like a kid, when all I am doing is stating my case, "can't we all get along"(Rodney King) ..I got a lots of time, bring it...
 
This is my thread, therefore I feel obligated to get the last word in. If you reply to this, I will reply to your reply until you stop replying...infinity. You are a Mod, and if you want to run this thread up into the 1000's then keep replying, and that would be your choice as a Mod, not mine. Damo might have something to say about useless BS being posted by you, since I will not stop replying on my own thread. Sheet I feel like I am scolding you like a kid, when all I am doing is stating my case, "can't we all get along"(Rodney King) ..I got a lots of time, bring it...

Just admit you don't know. It's not hard to do. Go on.
 
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