Canadian Tire treats their employees like shit. You are shopping at Canadian Walmart, nothing more.
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Friendly reminder that Home Hardware is also a Canadian owned hardware & building supply chain. Not as prevalent as the American Home Depot, Rona/Lowes choices, but they take care of their employees, and your money doesn't go into some MAGA Republican's coffers.
Shopping at home hardware is such a weird experience. You can ask questions and the people working there actually know the answers to the questions and can point you in the right direction.
It’s weird to interact with someone that isn’t a fucking troglodyte that knows nothing about the products they’re selling.
I agree wholeheartedly. I walked into a home hardware trying to get a replacement for a botd I'd stripped. The guy took one look at it and said "looks like an M5" and it was! Got me a new one and I was on my way. This was after I had just gone to Canadian Tire for the same thing. The "hardware guy" there was pretty much trying to find a match exclusively by vibe and colour matching
Just avoid the lowest end Chinesium parts and you'll be good.
I'm an "analyst" as well. My opinion is that Canadian Tire went all in on flyer delivery and e-mails and that is what turned the tide.
Cool story. Now pay your workers a living wage and get them health benefits.
Everyone forgot they were using facial recognition cameras
That and make the mechanic shop good faith again. Scammy reputation.
I would never take my car to Canadian Tire. I've heard way too many stories of bad service.
They would have to do some pretty amazing things to earn that trust back.
Warranty your products properly as well. I don't buy anything from Canadian tire that isn't disposable since they won't take back a 2 month old vacuum or car jack that stopped working.
They exchanged a Motomaster battery charger that was almost 20 months old. It suddenly stopped working, and they didn’t even bother testing it to confirm my assertion.
The biggest headache was finding the purchase in my account’s history, as they can only search a month at a time, and not by product. Very bad usability for something that employees likely use on an hourly basis.
My latest was a 2 month old Hoover vacuum that died on me. I had to go to Hoover who wanted me to pay to ship and repair it. I bought from Costco after that.
Since abandoning American retailers, I've certainly given Canadian Tire way more money than I used to. I'm not surprised that others have, too.
They really are an alternative to many of the things you might find at Walmart or Amazon.
And they sell a surprising amount of Made in Canada products, which is even more important to me.
Back in January I did a bit of price comparing between Canadian Tire, Home Depot and Rona for the materials for a project I was planning. (I wanted to check Home Hardware as well, but the closest one is about 75KM away, so not really practical in my case)
I was surprised to discover that Canadian Tire had better prices on all but 2 of the things I looked at. And even those 2, they were less than a dollar different.
And Home Depot's owner is Republican megadonor, so I avoid it whenever possible.
Rona is the Canadian alternative, right? Looks like it was owned by Lowes, but was re-established with headquarters in Quebec. Still, it can be hard to know with everybody trying to look as Canadian as possible.
Now owned by US private equity according to wiki.
Tools are pretty good bang for the buck for regular home owners that are handy...
I still would NEVER take my car to be serviced there... I rather set the car on fire
I rather set the car on fire
That would probably make the car safer than a CT tune-up.
Tools are pretty good bang for the buck
Don’t know what it is now, but for the longest time about ⅔ of the wrenches and rackets were rebranded Gearwrench, which is nothing to sneeze at. So OK, it’s not Grey Tools or Snap-On. But Gearwrench is solidly upper-end quality.
I am not 100% what they do now but when I moved 11 years ago I started getting some tools to fix my house, car, etc and most of them are still with me. I am not a handyman by trade to be sure, but I have done quite a bit of work around the house and tools lasting 10+ years are pretty acceptable for the price range IMO
I've heard several horror stories from friends about bringing cars to Canadian Tire.
They forgot to put oil in the car after an oil change.
They somehow managed to put a wheel bearing in backwards.
They claimed the lock nut key for the tires was missing when it was in plain view in the glove compartment and they had been told where to find it. They wanted to charge to cut off the lock nuts, which is a common garage scam.
I know of one horror story from my wife's cousin where they dropped her car from the lift during an oil change
Their tools barely last long enough to finish the job...
More than half the shit I buy there is some cheap Chinese crap that's either broken in the package or breaks as you take it out because of how flimsy it is.
Their tools barely last long enough to finish the job…
I've got a few of the Canadian Tire tools. A few nail guns, a compound mitre saw, air compressor, a few other things. They seem to do the trick and I've done a ton of large construction projects with them. They've lasted longer than some of the Skil and Ryobi products I've bought over the years.
Eh fuck you bud, I've been doing heavy equipment for years now. I've made well over 100 thousands of dollars with their "shitty tools" yeah the Allen keys and torx bits are a waste. But Sokets and wrenches? I think I broke one socket and never broke a wrench. Need good cutters or Pliers? Don't be a cheap prick they sell the knipex. Need a good knife? Yeah they have the olfa too. Screwdrivers? $30 bucks on regular sale gets you set for about 6months only because you loose them all not broken. Measuring tapes? They got house brands, Irwin, Stanley.
Eh fuck you bud
Shut up, eh you hoser.
( it's all in good fun 😉 )
Well ill take being a hoser than an ostrich fucker any day of the week. Or worse a yank.
But Sokets and wrenches?
For the longest time almost ⅓ of their Motomaster sets were rebranded Gearwrench. Especially the non-classic ones with extra features.
Now, Gearwrench may not be on par with Grey Tools or Snap-On. But it’s also significantly upper-shelf and definitely nothing to sneeze at.
I hate how much CT has stepped up their credit card sales tactics, I feel like their sales desk has creeped closer and closer to the entrance over the past few months.
I really hate it because getting assaulted with a sales pitch triggers an anxiety attack for me. Maxi is also guilty of this (PC Financial), but they put them at the exit so you can't leave.
But I do have to admit what they have to sell is good, Canadian and decently priced. I end up there a lot regardless for car parts and tools.
I just say that Visa and Mastercard are American companies, and I won't support them. No more anxiety and make the them feel bad for selling that shit.
At the local store here they stand 10ft past the turnstiles... My tactic is to just make no eye contact and veer away ASAP. If that fails, I tell them I already had one and learned my lesson. They don't follow up with anything after that in my experience.
This too causes me anxiety, and I have considered avoiding that location because of it. The other stores in the area don't do this thankfully.
Remember to only buy items on sale, all the others ones are overinflated. For instance the ratchet kit at $699 will go on sale at 80% off every 2 months, etc.
I bought an air rifle last year from CT. The person I talked to scanned it with their hand scanner and told me it was going on sale in two weeks.
I came back two weeks later and got it before they even had their sales tags up and asked to get it out since it was on sale. They were a bit confused on how I knew. I just said I saw it online.
Staff the stores and increase the quality of items you carry, and you'd be doing well. Not sure if they're doing that or whether this is just the Buy Canadian effect.
The time products spend on the shelves of a 'Canadian' Tire is just a layover on the way to the landfill.