Amazon has padded reviews. Look for items with a lot of reviews and ignore the positive comments. Only read the negative reviews to see what things people complain about. Some stuff will have nothing to do with quality but you will need to decifer what is relevant to you. Positive reviews don't mean anything unfortunately. If a product is good people will state that in the negative comments while they describe why they left a bad review. I buy more than a hundred items off Amazon a year and rarely make mistakes I find this method helpful as a consumer in day when reviews have so many motives to sound a certain way and you don't really know who is behind them.
I got some of these bits quite a while ago but haven't used them so it's to late to send them back so I'm stuck with them. Thanks for the video; I'll look at my bits tomorrow and hopefully they are not bad like yours.
Good for you! Manufacturers used to be proud of their work. Vendors were proud to sell a good product. It is never wrong to return something that is wrong. Kudos on the video. I'm subscribing, now.
So glad I found this this video, Thank you Ron. I've wasted the better of the day looking comparing & reading reviews on these Self Centering Hinge Sighting drills because I really need one to help me remove a hex flange bolt that broke off at 40 lb ft torque. What Bezo does he copies other people's gadgets and has them produced on the cheap. I don't know where to get these and the person who made the video on using these self centering guides didn't recommend a brand or seller, so I'm stuck. Its a shame that too many don't takes pride in what they sell, so long as they sell & make money.
I bought something very similar from Amazon and they are fine. I've got very poor eyesight and these self-catering bits really help to get the holes positioned just right.
I'm in the same broken boat. Sheared 9.8 hex head flange bolt in an upper intake on my light truck. Check this out and try getting more info, its a great video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dJfkCj3FWBs.html
3 years after you video I ordered a bunch of self-centering bits from Jeff Bezos. The Bosch bits were great, but everything else had poor machine work. Honestly, I'm surprised considering how easy the machine work should be on these bits.
Yes you are correct, let them first to see what they have to say, and what they will do about it! To me they look that they been used before ! or very old stock!
I’d hate to see the end product of the person who used them. Hopefully they weren’t used to install door hinges because someone may be trapped inside their house!
According to Amazon these are sold by Saiper(whoever that is) and "fulfilled" by Amazon. If you go to the "Saiper Storefront" you will find their reviews. The strange thing is, they only have 38 in the past 12 months.............. and they are are all 100%. I would have thought that in a year they would have had more than that. Their storefront has a lot of cheap drilling, screwing, sanding and routing type things. And.......... few weird items that just don't fit in. Lee Valley is your friend I believe on this one Ron. JimE
Got the magnifying glass and checked mine they were all ok except the drill bits were only carbon steel no real problem I will replace them as they wear out. You certainly got a bad batch.
Smart decision! I'd look for a different brand. You get what you pay for --- usually anyway. www.leevalley.com/en-ca/shop/tools/power-tool-accessories/drill-bits/40239-hex-shank-centering-bits?item=04J0420&gclid=Cj0KCQjwhvf6BRCkARIsAGl1GGiz3QRuZj7S8kHNIo1-UUfJD-XFPh5E99CmBv_RU3z6urvoYIAyukAaAiLhEALw_wcB
That's the problem with all these cheap low quality tools that flood the market most are not worth buying as there is no craftsmanship or QC in this junk, I have bits and such that are like 20 years old and are not mega costly but all are true and machined really well that was then, now it seems that so much made today is junk even from companies like General that had some decent stuff way back but, but now it seems that quality has dropped a lot and they are now making there stuff in China, why as it used to be decent for the money but now not so much, so it seems gone are the times of buying tools that were at one time great yet did not cost an arm and a leg, now though even things that you would expect to be made with quality in mind are just not. I just purchased a specialty 15.5 mil bit from amazon and while ya I new it wouldn't be the best I did expect it to at least be straight how do they even machine a lopsided bit with today's machining capabilities i know a bit this thick did not just bend on its own, that's sad just no QC at all and it was like $15 bucks so I expected better quality then if I purchased some really cheap $5 dollar crap which I do not do, but it seems that so much of these tools are built like 5 dollar crap ... some stuff is prety good but its like finding a needle in a haystack, I have purchased a few good tools on amazon but it seems for the most part they sell junk when it comes to tools. I think these days we must all stick to a few HQ brands if we can find em because as I have said so many trusted brands are no longer made in the USA and even some German brands are not even made in Germany anymore. So buyer beware. Good luck I actually have a set of self centering drills made by General a few years back in the USA and those actually work great and are well machined no burs or junk metal as seen on the ones you purchased, maybe look at General with those you only get 2 but they are HQ.
Any time you pay that little for a set of self centering drill bits you should be expecting to be disappointed. You get what you pay for,buy Montana brand,made in America made with top quality.
Good video. Some stuff you get on amazon is good, most all of it is fast, some of the stuff is super cheap and super low/bad quality. Hope you get good stuff next time. :)
@@jimmcdiarmid7308 I've lives in Winnipeg since 1965. A lotta years have slipped away, but can't complain. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XMwHg7Jf8lQ.html