RusticRockape
New member
Do uk companies produce their own power tools,or do they have them made in China and just put their name on them?. If they do are they any good.
Do uk companies produce their own power tools,or do they have them made in China and just put their name on them?. If they do are they any good.
Must admit to being pleasantly surprised at this.With respect to handheld power tools, the answer is "where they do, only some of the range".:
Makita has a factory in Telford which produces some of their range in the UK, quite a lot of Japanese manufacturing too (obviously not UK, but not China either).GTech has a factory in Worcester, which produces some of their cordless garden tool range.
Moving to static woodworking machines, things get a bit more encouraging:
Record Power brought manufacturing for some of their dust extractors back to the UK, and has been investing in more machining capacity here which suggests they will do the same for other things in time.Dalton's in Nottingham still manufacture a limited range of Wadkin Machines here.Sedgwick in Leeds do a similar limited range of well built woodworking machinery.Stenner still build wide-band resaws and sawmilling equipment in the UK.
But in machine tools things are definitely still bein made here, some particularly nifty stuff too:
Myford has been bought out and moved to Mytholmroyd in West Yorkshire, and still produce machines to order.Dean Smith and Grace still manufacture lathes in Preston, as well as doing factory rebuilds, although their brand new machines are all CnC turning centers.Asquith Butler (formerly Butler Machine Tool), predominantly rebuild rather than manufacture, but can still supply new Elgamills built to order and will also take on work to supply huge custom built CnC machines last I heard.Heller Machine Tools are outside Birmingham producing high end CNC VMC and HMC units.BSA now manufactures a range of CnC machines, whilst rebuilding Herbert, Churchill, and their own machines to factory standards.This speaks to the state of UK manufacturing generally, we still excel at making niche, difficult products to very high standards; but don't have much capacity for consumer level mass production left.
DeWalt tools say made in the UK...Must admit to being pleasantly surprised at this.
I thought stuff at the lower end, as in not high end industrial kit, was all made abroad.
DeWalt tools say made in the UK...
Another one to add to the list; Broadbent Stanley make heavy duty lathes in Halifax. They also took over the Parkson range of heavy milling machines.With respect to handheld power tools, the answer is "where they do, only some of the range".:
Makita has a factory in Telford which produces some of their range in the UK, quite a lot of Japanese manufacturing too (obviously not UK, but not China either).GTech has a factory in Worcester, which produces some of their cordless garden tool range.
Moving to static woodworking machines, things get a bit more encouraging:
Record Power brought manufacturing for some of their dust extractors back to the UK, and has been investing in more machining capacity here which suggests they will do the same for other things in time.Dalton's in Nottingham still manufacture a limited range of Wadkin Machines here.Sedgwick in Leeds do a similar limited range of well built woodworking machinery.Stenner still build wide-band resaws and sawmilling equipment in the UK.
But in machine tools things are definitely still bein made here, some particularly nifty stuff too:
Myford has been bought out and moved to Mytholmroyd in West Yorkshire, and still produce machines to order.Dean Smith and Grace still manufacture lathes in Preston, as well as doing factory rebuilds, although their brand new machines are all CnC turning centers.Asquith Butler (formerly Butler Machine Tool), predominantly rebuild rather than manufacture, but can still supply new Elgamills built to order and will also take on work to supply huge custom built CnC machines last I heard.Heller Machine Tools are outside Birmingham producing high end CNC VMC and HMC units.BSA now manufactures a range of CnC machines, whilst rebuilding Herbert, Churchill, and their own machines to factory standards.This speaks to the state of UK manufacturing generally, we still excel at making niche, difficult products to very high standards; but don't have much capacity for consumer level mass production left.
Edit:
Missed off some machine tool companies.
Jones and Shipman, now trading as Jones & Shipman Hardinge, but still producing machines in the UK600 Group, a merger of UK manufacturers Colchester, Harrison, Pratt-Burnedd and US based Causing, still building Machines and Chucks in Elland, outside Halifax.
There's tooling to consider as well:
Clico Tooling have been bought out by Lidsters, who produce a lot of their old tooling range just south of Sheffield.Aircraft and Commercial Tooling are still active in Sheffield.Ernest Bennet still produce saw blades in Darlington and Dinnington.Atkinson Walker merged with relative newcomer Sheffield Industrial Saws, but continue to manufacture in the city.
Priory make centre punches in the UK
Abingdon King Dick also still make spanners and other engineering tools in Birmingham;
King Dick Tools
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