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Craftsman Stainless Steel Chest & Cabinet 58628 and 58627

RS23VOA

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I'm been checking these two pieces out for over a year. I said when the combo was under a thousand i would buy it. Today i went by Sears and they were on sale for $999.99. I haggled a little and got the combo for $899.00. I was all excited and brought it home and unloaded it and put it together. I then put a magnet on it and it stuck like a regular piece of steel, just like it apparently is. Pisses me off. Every piece of literature in the store and the outside of the box says stainless steel. I feel like Sears has screwed me over. I have half a mind to take it back but its not a bad deal i guess.
 
If you read the details it says,

This Craftsman® Premium Heavy-Duty 5-drawer top chest is packed with quality features like stainless steel clearcoat finish, sturdy gas struts, lid stiffener in chest lid, large tray area and enlarged drawer trim. Open the drawers and experience solid, smooth drawer operation with DynaGlide™ drawer performance. That coupled with the ball-bearing slides and GRIPLATCH® drawer system, you will be able to store up to 100 lbs. in each drawer. Easily organize small to longer, large tools. Add it to the rolling cabinet (Item #009-58628) to organize all your tools into one easy-to-use tool chest.

I would take it back if you want a true SS box. If a steel box costs that much what does an actual SS box cost?

UPDATE: Look at the left side in the description where it reads,

Color Family: Stainless steel
Color/Finish: Stainless Steel

Case Material: Steel

This is NOT stainless steel. My refrigerator is the same finish and I have magnets all over it. I like it because the finish doesn't show prints.
 
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Yeah thats another thought. I thought i was getting a deal. Shame on me.
 
Not all stainless is non magnetic, some have different nickel content and the stainless that won't hold a magnet is the better (more corrosive resistant). So yes it's probably stainless just not the high grade stuff. I personally dislike Craftsmen ever since my last tool purchase, boy have they went downhill fast.
 
Really that's not a bad price for any set of boxes like those. It's a low grade of stainless and should be fine if taken care of. Plus it has been clear coated. It's the look of stainless that they are selling, verses the painted ones. It's just like the ss grills they sell now days. It's the look!
 
I bought a "stainless set" from Costco of all places like 10-11 years ago. Thing is right at 6 foot tall & 42 inches wide. Way bigger than my old Mac boxes. I gave $725 for it then. Sears is like everybody; foreign made stuff now.
 
The labels at the store and the box says stainless steel, not stainless steel look.
 
The labels at the store and the box says stainless steel, not stainless steel look.

FYI: Magnetic and Non-magnetic.

How many types of stainless steel are there?

Stainless steel is usually divided into 5 types:
a.Ferritic – These steels are based on Chromium with small amounts of Carbon usually less than 0.10%. These steels have a similar microstructure to carbon and low alloy steels. They are usually limited in use to relatively thin sections due to lack of toughness in welds. However, where welding is not required they offer a wide range of applications. They cannot be hardened by heat treatment. High Chromium steels with additions of Molybdenum can be used in quite aggressive conditions such as sea water. Ferritic steels are also chosen for their resistance to stress corrosion cracking. They are not as formable as austenitic stainless steels. They are magnetic.
b.Austenitic - These steels are the most common. Their microstructure is derived from the addition of Nickel, Manganese and Nitrogen. It is the same structure as occurs in ordinary steels at much higher temperatures. This structure gives these steels their characteristic combination of weldability and formability. Corrosion resistance can be enhanced by adding Chromium, Molybdenum and Nitrogen. They cannot be hardened by heat treatment but have the useful property of being able to be work hardened to high strength levels whilst retaining a useful level of ductility and toughness. Standard austenitic steels are vulnerable to stress corrosion cracking. Higher nickel austenitic steels have increased resistance to stress corrosion cracking. They are nominally non-magnetic but usually exhibit some magnetic response depending on the composition and the work hardening of the steel.
c.Martensitic - These steels are similar to ferritic steels in being based on Chromium but have higher Carbon levels up as high as 1%. This allows them to be hardened and tempered much like carbon and low-alloy steels. They are used where high strength and moderate corrosion resistance is required. They are more common in long products than in sheet and plate form. They have generally low weldability and formability. They are magnetic.
d.Duplex - These steels have a microstructure which is approximately 50% ferritic and 50% austenitic. This gives them a higher strength than either ferritic or austenitic steels. They are resistant to stress corrosion cracking. So called “lean duplex” steels are formulated to have comparable corrosion resistance to standard austenitic steels but with enhanced strength and resistance to stress corrosion cracking. “Superduplex” steels have enhanced strength and resistance to all forms of corrosion compared to standard austenitic steels. They are weldable but need care in selection of welding consumables and heat input. They have moderate formability. They are magnetic but not so much as the ferritic, martensitic and PH grades due to the 50% austenitic phase.
e. Precipitation hardening (PH) - These steels can develop very high strength by adding elements such as Copper, Niobium and Aluminum to the steel. With a suitable “aging” heat treatment, very fine particles form in the matrix of the steel which imparts strength. These steels can be machined to quite intricate shapes requiring good tolerances before the final aging treatment as there is minimal distortion from the final treatment. This is in contrast to conventional hardening and tempering in martensitic steels where distortion is more of a problem. Corrosion resistance is comparable to standard austenitic steels like 1.4301 (304).
 
great information there coloradodave
 
I bought a "stainless set" from Costco of all places like 10-11 years ago. Thing is right at 6 foot tall & 42 inches wide. Way bigger than my old Mac boxes. I gave $725 for it then. Sears is like everybody; foreign made stuff now.

I bought the same ones from costco over 10 years ago for 699.00 I think, HammerHead is the name on them and they still look and work like new.
And magnets don't stick to it, I just checked.

Now I know more about stainless than I ever wanted, thanks Dave.
 
My brother has a costco Cabinet also. He made sure to tell me a magneT won't stick to his! Thanks for the stainless lesson. I'm stick ticked off though that a magnet sticks to it!
 
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