I think in 1903 the choice of airplanes might have been a bit limited!
I recall as a kid perusing the Sears Wishbook every year at Christmas time, dreaming about everything from microscopes to minibikes.
While you were dreaming of microscopes and minibikes, @eman1200 was thumbing through the "soft pron" section of the catalog...
I remember that for a long time, even into the late 80's, the only credit card Sears would accept was their own.
Ours closed a few months ago. Not that it mattered. It had been a ghost town the last few years anyway.
Yeah, I liked the catalog too. And I hate to see a company like that go under. It was like Lampert did it on purpose. I just can't fathom why. Retail's a tough business now, more so than ever. Almost impossible to compete against Amazon, Wal-Mart, HD, Lowe's, etc. But I think they could have done it.
The experiences I've had with them the last few years:
* Ordered a computer online. It was supposed to arrive in-store in a week. Half an hour after I placed the order I got an email that it was in. I figured maybe the store had one in stock so I took off work early and drove over to pick it up. Waited half an hour for the guy to look for it, to no avail. Each day for the next week I got the same "your order is ready to be picked up" email, each day with the same result. I finally asked for the store manager, only to be told he was busy. The ass't manager got snotty with me and said maybe I'd be happier shopping somewhere else.
* Bought a dishwasher, only to get it home to find that it requires a special Kenmore adapter for the supply line hookup. Back to the store, but by then they were closed. The next day I asked the guy why it's not included w/ every dishwasher since it's a REQUIRED item. And why the salesman neglected to mention at the time that I might want to buy one.
* I went to buy dad a Christmas present last year and they couldn't find my account in their computer system. I said I didn't really care, I was paying cash and just wanted to get on with my shopping. Apparently they can't sell you anything w/o them being able to find you in their system. It took twenty minutes from start to finish - what should have been a one-minute transaction.
You can only have so many bad experiences with a store. Oddly, I still made my wife walk with me through the store every time she drug me to the mall. (I'm confident that w/o Sears she'd have made me walk through the mall with her a lot more often, so there is that.)
I put up with it because they had what I was looking for in my price range.
Do you mean her or the fridge?
I just threw up a little in my mouth thinking of that.....
I have met some total disgusting folks in my life, and she was probably in the top 10.
Yeah, similar stories here.
I had a Craftsman torque wrench break, and Sears told me that a torque wrench wasn't a "hand tool" and wasn't covered by the lifetime warranty.
I had a Sears garage door opener at my last house. Pizz-poor design used nylon gears, which turned into nylon dust a month or two after the warranty ran out. Sears wanted some ridiculous amount to repair it, so I bought new gears and fixed it myself. Of course, the replacement gears also crumbled, and rebuilding the opener became an annual ritual.
Then there was the Kenmore washer and dryer....
Oh well.
I remember that for a long time, even into the late 80's, the only credit card Sears would accept was their own.
Mom & Dad had the same experience in the early 60's. Dad was honked off about it until the day he died. Never applied for another Sears card, and that guy loved his plastic!A few months after I graduated college and started working full time (1984), I applied for a few credit cards. Got an AmEx, a Visa, and a Chevron card. Applied for a Sears card and they turned me down. A year or two later they started trying to get me to open a Sears account every time I bought something but I adamantly refused. Never did open one.
Another thing that jumps out at me is that Sears was catalog sales for most of it's existence, yet what is online shopping? It's essentially catalog sales!
That was pretty much my experience. I was trying to buy things for my first apartment and later a house. Sears was the go-to place because it had everything under one roof. But every time I'd try to buy something I'd remember why I would end up going somewhere else - they wouldn't take anything other than a Sears card or a check (or cash). I wasn't into racking up credit card debt, I'd pay it off every month, but that didn't mean I'd always have enough in my checking account to cover a big purchase on any particular day.A few months after I graduated college and started working full time (1984), I applied for a few credit cards. Got an AmEx, a Visa, and a Chevron card. Applied for a Sears card and they turned me down. A year or two later they started trying to get me to open a Sears account every time I bought something but I adamantly refused. Never did open one.
Yeah, similar stories here.
I had a Craftsman torque wrench break, and Sears told me that a torque wrench wasn't a "hand tool" and wasn't covered by the lifetime warranty.
.
I got the same answer when my torque wrench let go. At least they were consistent, I thought the guy behind the counter was an idiot. Someone up the line in finance/accounting decided that because it had moving parts it was no longer a hand tool? Probably saved a ton of return expenditures and reaped the CEO a hefty bonus.
Mom & Dad had the same experience in the early 60's. Dad was honked off about it until the day he died. Never applied for another Sears card, and that guy loved his plastic!
Another thing that jumps out at me is that Sears was catalog sales for most of it's existence, yet what is online shopping? It's essentially catalog sales!
Then I needed a second one, saw one at the store and picked it up. Same price as the first one, but apparently from a different contract manufacturer. Cheap plastic, everything broke off, poor performance and lasted maybe two years.
I think they hooked up with Discover [the "new guy" card] in the early 1980s. I got one, because they used a beautiful woman to pitch it, and I'm an idiot. I did get a free calculator, however.I remember that for a long time, even into the late 80's, the only credit card Sears would accept was their own.
I think that's right, I forgot about the Discover card.I think they hooked up with Discover [the "new guy" card] in the early 1980s. I got one, because they used a beautiful woman to pitch it, and I'm an idiot. I did get a free calculator, however.
Went to the store a couple of months ago and it was a ghost town.
It was never a hand tool, even three decades ago. That doesn't mean that the guy behind the counter wouldn't swap it, because he didn't know.I got the same answer when my torque wrench let go. At least they were consistent, I thought the guy behind the counter was an idiot. Someone up the line in finance/accounting decided that because it had moving parts it was no longer a hand tool? Probably saved a ton of return expenditures and reaped the CEO a hefty bonus.
Yeah, similar stories here.
I had a Craftsman torque wrench break, and Sears told me that a torque wrench wasn't a "hand tool" and wasn't covered by the lifetime warranty.
I had a Sears garage door opener at my last house. Pizz-poor design used nylon gears, which turned into nylon dust a month or two after the warranty ran out. Sears wanted some ridiculous amount to repair it, so I bought new gears and fixed it myself. Of course, the replacement gears also crumbled, and rebuilding the opener became an annual ritual.
Then there was the Kenmore washer and dryer....
Oh well.
At the other end of the spectrum the only vacuum Mom had was an Interstate Compact Vacuum. Literally indestructible! I don't know how many times that thing went down the steps like a bowling ball, but it was a lifetime purchase. Purchased in 1960, my brother still has it and it still works perfectly.
https://www.vdta.com/Magazines/JUN11/fc-GaskoJun11.html
First credit card I applied for out of college. Tools, of course. I was going to pay cash as I built my supply of tools, but my parents suggested getting the Sears card and paying it off every month to build credit.