Some make powered routers deliver, but that is a topic in itself.
Ew mac.
As a guitar builder sometimes, I quickly learned that whatever stew mac has now is not necessarily going to be like what stew mac had 25 years ago, and I understand the business was sold by the original family who ran it - probably to a well capitalized follow-up buyer.
Translates to a whole lot of stuff extremely high priced or switched out from japanese made to chinese made, but you can go shop outside of Ew Mac and find the original japanese products elsewhere cheaper than the chinese replacements. Sometimes the chinese stuff is almost as good, sometimes it's not close.
And no mention of origin in listings now, but rather a boast about how easy it is to return things (that should rarely be needed with good tools).
Everything there - pax fret saw - $40 on the internet, $70 at stew mac.
Those router bases are all really expensive, too, and it's hard to figure out if S-M deserves to get paid double for them (can't tell if they developed them or if they're just relabeling).
Too, they have told me false information when I asked questions about origin - their "parson street" pickups state no origin and someone was gray marketing them for only $45 on etsy. At the time, they were $80 at S-M. I suspected they weren't made in the western world because nobody makes good humbuckers that cheaply. They flatly said "they're the same as ours (the gray market) and they're made in the US".
Guess where they're made - china.
I thought that was pretty presumptuous to ask $80 - just looked, they're $110 now.
ballsy. Sound-wise, they're not in a class with pickups like antiquities or really any other western PAF clones or even gibson stock pickups.
Long bit of info there - but kind of a sign of the times - we see it in tools, but it's everywhere, not just woodworking. Coupons, free shipping, buyer's club, free returns - all of it glosses over the fact that usually the tools aren't that great and even beyond that, they are more "with coupon" and all of the supposed deals than they would be if just bought individually. They know their market - my opinion, they've given up (like woodworking tools) selling tools to experienced users and are hunting for the constant flow of new beginners in a mid life crisis from a white collar job looking to buy into making a guitar.