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ToolGuyd > Power Tools > Are Vevor Tools and Machinery any Good?

Are Vevor Tools and Machinery any Good?

Jun 9, 2023 Stuart 57 Comments

If you buy something through our links, ToolGuyd might earn an affiliate commission.
Vevor 7x14 Metal Benchtop Lathe

I keep coming across Vevor tools online, such as this 7×14 benchtop metal lathe.

The company looks to be very broadly focused brand, as you can see from their Amazon store.

User reviews for Vevor tools and machinery seem to be mixed, but through repetition I’ve started to take a closer look at their products.

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Many of Vevor’s metalworking machines look to roll out of the same factory as similarly-sized tools sold at Harbor Freight, Grizzly, Little Machine Shop, and other retailers, but at significantly lower prices. Are they worth it?

Yes, I know – I’m supposed to be the one answering that question, but I have largely ignored the brand. They’ve emailed me a couple of times before, offering products for review opportunities, but so far I haven’t responded.

It’s getting difficult to ignore them, however, given how often I now see the tools on Amazon or being promoted on YouTube and social media.

As an aside, it always bugs me when a company emails me with a generic email address, such as “[email protected].” I always like to know who I’m communicating with.

I’m curious about Vevor tools in the same way as with other more value-centric brands, such as Wen and Grizzly, but not enough to factor the brand into any of my purchasing decisions.

I asked a similar question about Wen – What About Wen Tools? – and have heard good feedback about them over the years. Vevor reminds me of Wen and Grizzly, but with a less curated approach.

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To me, it seems that if Vevor can find a supplier, they put their name on it, allowing them to rise above other lesser-known brands doing more or less the same thing.

Vevor had a heavy presence on Amazon, and I’ve also seen their products on Home Depot’s website.

Their slogan is “tough tools, half price” in some places, and “tough equipment, lowest prices” in others.

Have you had any experiences with Vevor tools, good or bad?

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57 Comments

  1. MM

    Jun 9, 2023

    Funny you mention it, the name seems to pop up everywhere: I came across an ad for a Vevor branded Drag Harrow about an hour ago. It looked like cheapo flimsy rubbish.

    Reply
  2. Shane

    Jun 9, 2023

    I’m curious too. I just bought a Vevor brand ultrasonic cleaner. I found it on the shelf in one of those salvage stores, but it was brand new in the box. I haven’t given it a try yet, but it looks pretty well-built, and I am cautiously optimistic.

    Reply
    • Ron

      Jun 10, 2023

      I’ve used my vevor sonic cleaner for 6 months and love it. Will buy another soon. I use it for atv parts.

      Reply
    • Michael S.

      Jun 11, 2023

      Be careful with that ultrasonic cleaner, some of them are not safe: https://www.gov.uk/product-safety-alerts-reports-recalls/product-safety-report-vevor-ultrasonic-cleaners-2205-0322-2205-0324

      Reply
    • Scott

      Jun 12, 2023

      I purchased the 3 liter “professional “ version on Amazon last summer. 4th use I set the timer for 4 minutes and the heat to 30 Celsius and after 20 seconds it caught fire. I was past the 30 day return window on Amazon but Vevor was very quick to respond to an email and issued a refund that day

      Reply
      • Shane

        Jun 12, 2023

        Whoa! Thanks for the heads up. I know not to leave it unattended to begin with

        Reply
  3. Jp

    Jun 9, 2023

    Name hasn’t popped up. Maybe because I never searched the term, or any tool which they make a version of. My browser shameless presents products that I searched for recently

    Reply
    • David

      Jun 11, 2023

      Samething for me. The moment I click on a particular item, wheather it be the Amazon app or through Chrome browser. It never fails to that I would get pop ups/ ads about the same item or whatever I was previously searching for. Google constantly looking at what I look at

      Reply
      • Stuart

        Jun 12, 2023

        It’s not just Google searches.

        If you go to a retailer, their ads will follow you around the internet.

        Some retailers will also target via social media, such as Facebook or Instagram.

        Reply
        • UberChemist

          Jul 29, 2024

          It gets real crazy when you just talk about a product (physically with your mouth to a real person, nothing on the Internet) and then you start seeing ads for it

          Reply
  4. Wayne R.

    Jun 9, 2023

    In a very short period, I saw the never-before Vevor name popping up in a variety of avenues hawking a variety of stuff; that sort of ubiquity doesn’t just happen.

    China’s trying a new unified marketing approach to creating a “brand” out of thin air.

    Reply
    • Bonnie

      Jun 9, 2023

      The online brand has been around about a decade, the chinese factory since ’07 (assuming the two companies are related). Looks like they’re probably another hybrid white-label brand (ala WEN, but much broader and without aquiring an existing defunt brand). Making some things but then also rebranding everything else under the sun. One step up from the fly-by-night alphabet brands on Amazon.

      Not like slapping one logo on a thousand unrelated products in new or uniquely Chinese. Every big box store and catalog seller has done it, even actual manufacturers can have frankly ludicrous breadth (Hitachi made artillery, refrigerators, power tools, laptops, *cutlery*, etc).

      Reply
    • Eric Lukaszewicz

      Feb 19, 2024

      I’ve also been wondering about their products so far I have bought the 6’/11’ multi purpose ladder and the miter saw stand and so far both of them have been good. I have been looking at their hydraulic press but I’m a little scared to try it. It is close in price to harbor freight’s price the reviews on their website don’t have any real bad ones but I don’t know if that’s only because they may edit them. Lowe’s does sell their press (vevor) which may end up being a more convenient way to get it. But it would be $12 cheaper through the company and if I have to return it I don’t know if I can return it through Lowe’s if I buy it directly from vevor.

      Reply
  5. Blocky

    Jun 9, 2023

    I considered Vevor for baker scaffolding recently, but I was able to wait on a sale and got the Metaltech from Home Depot for a better price.

    Reply
  6. dll932

    Jun 9, 2023

    We just bought a Vevor magnetic drill press for about $200. It works fine. You can tell it was made from an adapted 1/2 inch drill. The instructions are some of the most hysterical Engrish I ever read.

    Reply
    • Shane

      Jun 12, 2023

      Lol! My instructions cover both “mechanical” and “ ditigal” operations!

      Reply
      • eddie sky

        Jun 13, 2023

        and all in that same generic font…times knockoff.

        Reply
  7. Matt C.

    Jun 9, 2023

    YouTube channel “Den of Tools” did a video on them about a month ago. Sounded like a lot of lawsuits for copyright infringement… His recommendation was to stay clear of them.

    Reply
    • Mike

      Jun 10, 2023

      You beat me to it. If the info in his video is real, it’s a hard pass.

      Reply
    • DocDawg

      Jun 10, 2023

      Same
      Seems to be the same CCP- managed infringement iVe noticed. Quality minimal, but price great. A real dilemma in purchasing

      Reply
    • ITCD

      Jun 13, 2023

      Patents and in the Ken Tool case, trademark. Copyright is about creative works. Ken Tool has a registered trademark for using the color blue as a trade dress for tire tools which Vevor infringed on. They have a bunch of other litigation surrounding patents.

      Reply
  8. Addicted2Red

    Jun 9, 2023

    I’ve used them for like 6 years now. I consider them a step up above the no name chinese clones.

    Very very slight step up. Yes its the same oem/factory that makes grizzly/shopfox/rikon and other clones, just a bit less QC than those brands.

    Some of the items have been rock solid and packaged well. Bought glass DRO scales for my lathe and mill, no problems with them for years.

    Ultrasonic cleaner and 8ton air ram has been good too.

    Reply
  9. Al

    Jun 10, 2023

    Terrible service. Email from different people with the standard answer: Wait a week. The anvil I ordered disappeared in a UPS warehouse. Had to order my own replacement, than wait for a refund. Took over a month from ordering before I actually received it. Box was thrashed. Had a note from UPS ‘bad packaging’.

    I put it next to a similarly-sized anvil I bought from Harbor Freight. The HF is decent in appearance. Makes the Vevor look like a manufacturing reject. Casting is terrible, with pock marks and bad sand mold texture.

    I don’t trust them. Out of safety concerns, I’m definitely not going to buy a stair railing, ladder, or cooking appliances.

    Reply
    • David Z

      Jun 11, 2023

      It might depend on which one you get. Walter Sorrells just did a Vevor anvil review. He seemed pretty pleased relative to its weight and cost. https://youtu.be/N2HfwoQ8iJw

      Reply
      • Al

        Jun 13, 2023

        Yes, he got the free, cherry-picked version reserved for YouTubers. Needs cleaning and dressing. Not saying what I received isn’t worthy of pounding on. Saying that the supplier is not reliable, and customer service for non-reviewers is terrible. Quality is on-par with other cheaply-made stuff from China or India. Not something I’d trust life or limb with. My comparison is with the HF model, which is slightly more expensive. But, it doesn’t require grinding and re-painting. And, when it is in stock, you take it home the same day. Vevor took a month and charged me a price increase for the second one they sent.

        If we compare it to the YouTuber review model, I guess the conclusion is maybe I should get a YouTube channel so they’ll send a good one in less than a month?

        Walter Sorrell’s review was good. He was lucky to get decent treatment as a reviewer.

        Reply
  10. Peter Fox

    Jun 10, 2023

    Although I have never bought or used any Vevor branded tools or anything else for that matter, I do have some knowledge from the home shop machinist side.

    As you already know all small machine tools are a compromise, they lack the work envelope, mass, and often features that industrial machine have. However far more often than not the compromises are acceptable if you can keep your expectations reasonable.

    In the case of small bench lathes (not counting watch makers types) They range from small machines such as the Taig, Sherline, and Unimat. Up to much more serious 10″ to 12″ swing machines from manufacturers such as South-bend, Logan, Atlas, Sheldon , and modern import models. In general the 7×10, 7×12, and 7×14 models are on the smaller end but still quite usable.

    I suspect that most of them are made by Seig industrial group out of Shanghai, China. Their C2 or C3 models being the base versions https://www.siegind.com/shop/c2-mini-lathe. It seems that each of the various companies that re-brands them picks their color and the target price range and Seig makes them what they want. As such there is a wide range of quality across the various brands. As with anything in like you get what you pay for. I have had the displeasure of using a Cummins branded 7X12 lathe that a nearby high school robotics team had in their shop once. It was very rough around the edges and had every corner cut from a quality stand point. on the other end of the spectrum Little Machine Shop sells what look to be some very nice well featured version that I have no doubt are well adjusted and ready to run.

    One of the good things about there being so many brands and levels of quality is that there is a large community of users and thus a large base of knowledge on how to get the most out of these machines. A helpful comment that has stuck since I was researching my options for a bench-top milling machine 15 years ago, “don’t think of these low cost import machine tools as ready to use machines, think of them as pre-assembled kits”. While quite a bit has changed with companies like Little Machine Shop and Precision Matthews offering and demanding better quality. The thought is still quite valid for most small machine tools. As long as you are aware of the risks and willing to put in the effort to fine tune, upgrade, and in some cases finish the machine, you can get usable equipment and learn a lot in the process. As a starting point upgrading the spindle bearings to decent quality tapered roller type seems like a good starting point if the lathe doesn’t already come with them. If you are not comfortable with doing that it may make more sense to spend more initially.

    Personally I ended up with a Grizzly G0619 Bench-top mill (Seig SX3) and a 1936 South-Bend 9″ lathe with a 3 1/2 foot bed (23″ between centers). Although I would love slightly larger machines I can do a lot with what I have. The biggest limitations I have run into has been “Z” height on the mill and Spindle bore on the lathe. Otherwise I actually prefer them to larger industrial machines for the scale parts I usually deal with.

    On the smaller 7x lathes the biggest limitation I see is the bed length or distance between centers. It is real easy to run out of space with a large drill chuck and bit a long with a piece of large stock that cannot fit in the chuck/spindle bore. An older local fellow I know has a craftsman branded Atlas 6×18 and extra length definitely helps even on a small machine. If I was considering one of these lathes I would not want anything less that a 7×14 and probably lean more towards one of the 7×16 variant that Little Machine Shop offers (Probably the base version).

    TLDR: Any lathe is better than no lathe. If a 7x lathe will work for you, pick your price point versus quality trade-off and dive in.

    Reply
  11. Jeff

    Jun 10, 2023

    I have not bought tools, but I did get a dual beer keg tap kit and an ice machine for my bar. Ice machine has been great. One of the pressure regulators on the tap was bad and customer service said they would send a replacement. They sen me another ice machine by mistake. I bought another regulator on amazon and kept the second ice machine!!

    Reply
  12. Kyle

    Jun 10, 2023

    For better or worse VEVOR is just an import label slapped on products from many different actual manufacturers. Same stuff you would get from the alphabet soup brands on Amazon or eBay. Expect cheap components and sloppy finishes. Sometimes those are things I can live with for a bargain. My brother has one of their diesel heaters and has been happy with it. He bought some storage stuff and a few tools too.

    Many of their products are clones of name brands. An example would be their drain cleaning equipment. You can get knockoffs of Ridgid or General equipment for 20% of the name brands. Some of these designs have been sold almost unchanged for 50 years. So long as no parents are infringed I can’t hold it against VEVOR for ripping off the designs. Reputable American companies do the same thing. Here is my beef with VEVOR: they keep stealing marketing materials from other companies. I used to get regular YouTube ads for VEVOR drain equipment showing General employees, demonstrating General equipment with General logos all over everything. This is both theft from these manufacturers and dishonest advertising to customers. The snake VEVOR is selling for a few hundred is not the same thing as professional equipment General sells for a few thousand, even though they may look similar. I copied some links to the videos and passed them along to the manufacturers. A rep from General told me they had already sued them and won once before and would now do it again. I stopped seeing the ads ripping off General not too long after that, but a month or two later I started seeing ads with footage taken from Ridgid. Not quite as obvious, but you could tell. I passed it along to a rep.

    There’s room in my toolbox for spendy brands and cheap stuff alike. What I have no place for is dishonesty. Even if the products are okay for the price, I would rather get them through another source than VEVOR.

    Reply
  13. Kurt

    Jun 10, 2023

    If I was in the market for this type of tool, I would take a hard look at Precision Mathews.

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 10, 2023

      PM doesn’t have smaller sized machine tools; their smallest lathe starts at 10×22 and costs several thousand dollars vs less than $1000.

      But yes. I skipped smaller Seig-made lathes and am still hoping to budget the funds and space for a Precision Matthews.

      Reply
  14. fred

    Jun 10, 2023

    I bought some Vevor branded machinery skates that I could trace back to the Shanghai Sishun e-Commerce Co., Ltd. – but could not identify the OEM. They spilled ball bearings out (from their swivel plates) on first use. I guess that I was hoping for too much for $40 each. They supposedly had a 6 ton rating but 4 placed under a 1800 lb. load could not do the job.

    Reply
  15. RCWARD

    Jun 10, 2023

    I am pretty sure you know the answer to that question.

    Reply
  16. Travis

    Jun 10, 2023

    My neighbor is a believer and bought a couple different items. The drills are junk and the lathe actually arrived missing parts. He had a terrible time getting it replaced. That was enough to warn me off.

    Reply
  17. Pisek

    Jun 11, 2023

    I’ve used their 10 ton hydraulic ram to straighten a frame out. It came in a metal case that is slightly thinner than the metal cases I’ve got from Greenlee, the tool itself has worked great and has been holding pressure for over 2 weeks while I have been busy on other projects. Being half the price of a name brand I’m happy with it.

    Reply
  18. kent_skinner

    Jun 11, 2023

    They suddenly appeared on my radar. Seem to be one of many Chinese clone brands. I’m not sure if they are the manufacturer or just another reseller putting some money into marketing.

    That said, I need a Johnson bar to make moving my milling machine (about 2,000 lbs) and a few lathes easier. I’ve looked for ages to find a used on, but they never show up here. New ones are hundreds o dollars. I bought a Vevor (and had my choice of many indentical looking using from other brands) for $60. Yeah, it’s a gamble. As a hobbyist it’s hard to justify a $400 J bar when I can manage to get the job done otherwise. If the Vevor works and makes moves safer, it’s money well spent.

    Reply
  19. RickP

    Jun 11, 2023

    I agree with prior comments that Vevor is a step above the random Amazon brands. You shouldn’t expect too much — decent quality, but you get what you pay for. My experience with their customer service was very good.

    I bought some Vevor pallet forks for a compact tractor bucket. They are actually really good quality for the price, but Vevor’s packaging leaves a lot of room for improvement. Their shipping box disintegrated in transit (and was taped back together by FedEx). All the parts arrived, but there was some some very minor damage. Vevor’s customer service promptly offered a 30% credit, which was more than fair, and I was able to repair the damage in an hour.

    Reply
  20. Pot head

    Jun 11, 2023

    I have a vevor pottery wheel. No one else makes them in that price range. It’s usable, but only barely. Would not buy again. There’s no way a beginner could learn on it. From that experience I would not buy anything that needed precision. I’d maybe get a wood lathe, but definitely not a metal lathe for example. Expect to get far less power out of it than advertised. They cut every corner, even making it not ergonomical.

    Reply
  21. Stuart T.

    Jun 11, 2023

    Only experience has been with a diesel heater (Wabasto/Espar knockoff) which I got through Amazon.ca, which I use for warming painted parts in the winter etc. I had some questions about interpreting the display. Contacted Vevor, and like another commenter above, their CS was worse than useless (likewise the “manual”, which was ghastly.) Fortunately the vendor turned out to be helpful.

    You get what you pay for. In this case, I had to do some modifications to make it useful but it has worked well.

    BTW, if anyone is considering one of these, watch the You Tube video “My First Chinese Diesel Heater”, by “Tom the Dilettante”. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faz8RtV9t68). This guy is the gold standard for how a YT video should e done.

    Reply
  22. Mopar

    Jun 12, 2023

    I have no experience with them as far as tools, but as you said, they are VERY broadly based. I do have friends who have purchased some of their tractor attachments, and others who purchased some maple syrup making equipment. The consensus from both groups was they were junk. Besides the crappy welds and overall poor quality, it appears they don’t really have any understanding of what they are making/copying. Examples”
    Tractor attachments where hitch pins were the wrong size for the size attachment, or spaced wrong. “Features” that were unusable because other “features” they added interfered.

    Divided maple sap pans were the dividers did not go fully to the bottom of the pan, making the dividers useless. Pan welds that leaked. Non-standard fittings welded into the pan, etc. Like I said, it appears like they make stuff with no actual understanding of what they are making or how it’s used.

    Reply
  23. Brian

    Jun 12, 2023

    I bought a motor for my table saw from them. It stopped working after two weeks. After about three weeks of calling I eventually got a refund. I had to pay the $75 shipping charge to ship it back to them. Will never buy anything with that name on it ever again in my life.

    Reply
  24. Orneryknight

    Jun 13, 2023

    I’ve got several things from Vevor

    A laser for cutting stuff works pretty well for the price I paid (think it was vevor branded but not too sure…~ 85%)

    A spindle for CNC machining is working exactly as advertised – 700Watts of power input and the RPM is within 1% of what it said on the controller module (might be an irregularity in a potentiometer or so)

    Ultrasonic cleaners and transducers do their things within expected parameters

    An electrical motor I bought had a slight crack in an uncritical part of its housing, and they sent me a new one that does its job
    The gearing parts I ordered for it look a bit flimsy, but we’ll within the range of what you’d expect for that price

    All in all there’s still a few things where I’d advise caution for maybe not going too cheap, but personally I dig it.

    Reply
  25. eddie sky

    Jun 13, 2023

    No had the offer to test/try/buy/own Vevor but a few of my subscribed channels on utube were sent products to “review” and keep. Most disclaimed this. And most felt that if it were priced so cheap, they wouldn’t own them. Check out Mr Pete’s channel on machining. He had a mag drill and some side cutter bits (forgot their technical name) from Vevor. Surprised me that Mr Pete would use Chinesium products since he’s all USA made.
    I get that maybe, just maybe, there is a Chinese company that knows its under the PRC eyes, but also wants to make a product that it can be proud of not be an IP ripoff or poorly manufacturered, and can compete with Japanese/German engineering. I’ve seen one item, made by Harvey, that caught my eye, a bandsaw. And it puts Rikon and Laguna to task, let alone Grizzly and Jet. Unless I come across a 14″ vintage Porter (US) from someone’s estate… I think the next shop tool will be from Harvey.
    Anyone else notice the tool influencers on utube, more and more. And that “makers” and woodworkers ALL have Sawstops? Seriously…

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Jun 14, 2023

      They’ve emailed me 20 times so far.

      Reply
  26. Jaycob P.

    Jun 14, 2023

    I have a few items from them and haven’t had any issues. Haven’t tried any power equipment though.
    1) Anvil: no problems and was finished correctly.
    2) Clamp on tractor forks: The like to loosen up on the bucket, but they were the absolute cheapest so I’m not disappointed. They do what I want them to do and have held up under some significant loads.
    3) Weight box for my tractor: No issues at all. Welds were fine and the pins fit correctly. Worst issue was the door for emptying it was a different shade of red from the box itself, but again it as the cheapest I could find.

    Reply
  27. Barry+Abbott

    Jun 20, 2023

    We’ve had atrocious luck with Vevor equipment at work. Owner tried cheaping out and it bit us. 3 of 5 ice makers have had issues, one arrived dead with a short welding wires to the steel paneling. Both of the table carts arrived with broken welds and the powder coat on the frame of the cart flakes off if you look at it wrong, let alone tighten the frame to the point where it doesn’t wiggle.

    Their customer service model seems to be very much “make it difficult and maybe they’ll give up”

    Reply
  28. Gianna

    Aug 28, 2023

    Hi team,

    Hope my emails finds you well.

    This is Gianna from Vevor Affiliate program.

    May I know do you have interest to review our Vevor products? We can provide you free products, high commission, exclusive codes, SEM right etc.
    https://www.vevor.com

    If you have any requirements, please let me know.

    Look forward to hearing from you.

    Thanks & best regards,
    Gianna

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Aug 29, 2023

      This is the 12th invite we’ve received from Vevor since this post was published, and 32nd in the past year and a half.

      Reply
      • T-Man

        Dec 12, 2023

        Their method of cluster-bombing affiliate invitations makes me think quite low of them. I appreciate your curated reviews and recommendations and applaud you not falling for their crap. I go through your site to buy tools pretty often and endorsing Vevor would definitely lower my regard.
        Keep up the good work and only support the best! ..or at least the top half 😉

        Reply
  29. T-Man

    Dec 12, 2023

    Not worth it. Have you ever seen a company with this many safety recalls? https://www.gov.uk/search/all?keywords=vevor&order=relevance

    Interestingly enough, the USA seems completely fine with Vevor’s level of safety.
    https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls?search_combined_fields=vevor

    Seems fishy. I have a Vevor 4040 CNC router but it’s the first and last Vevor product I’ll ever buy.

    Reply
    • Bern

      May 12, 2024

      It’s super interesting to see all of the reports from the UK. Most of them are either due to wrong plug specs or poor ground. What a shame to destroy all this equipment for such easily corrected issues. But yes, very serious if unaware. Maybe only the experienced tinkerers should buy vevor.

      Id generally avoid them and other Amazon brands for anything electrical that’s meant to be run unattended. The biggest deal is that none of them are UL listed, and that’s what worries me when left unattended.

      On the other hand I’ve bought many deck post railings and parts from them installed in multi million dollar homes. No issues with those. It’s like early days harbor freight. Avoid anything with a motor and you’ll be fine.

      Just know to be selective.

      Reply
  30. Rob Ziemba

    Feb 23, 2024

    I’ve been an HVAC tech for almost 10 years and I’m doing progressively more side work. I’m running into a lot of installations that could really use ProPress for water lines. The cost of ProPress equipment is real steep, but I saw that vivore has a unit that’s only $800. I’m really tempted to buy it and then see how it handles as opposed to a $3,400 one from rigid or Milwaukee

    Reply
  31. Jason

    Mar 12, 2024

    It’s amazing how many idiots get on here and bash a company THAT THEY HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO EXPERIENCE WITH!!!! I purchase thousands of dollars worth of tools every month and I have found that some of VEVOR tools are just as good if not better than name brand!!! I bought 4 MATCO 10 ton portapowers and I ended up using 2 of them immediately and left the other 2 in there boxes for 6 months and I went to use the 2 that were open and BOTH of them had seals leaking and blown out rams!!! So I opened the other 2 that were still brand new in the box and both of those POS’s leaked also!!!!! So now I’m pissed because I just paid $800+ for each of those 4 portapowers from MATCO and then I find out that MATCO only warranties those POS’s for 30 days and basically told me to get f’d!!!! And then I bought a couple VEVOR 10 ton portapowers for $100 each and I have had them for years with absolutely NO PROBLEMS!!!!! So yes MATCO lost ALL MY BUSINESS and I will happily buy VEVOR from my experience!!!! And I just bought that 7″x14″ lathe the other day and I haven’t even set it up yet but I know that it will probably need some modification and adjustment to make it work properly but it is 1/2 to 1/10 the price of the other Chinese made garbage that is sold for more money like JET!!! I know I’m buying a cheap Chinese tool but it’s better than paying 10 times more for a cheap Chinese tool with a American name sticker stuck on the side of it!!!

    Reply
    • Bob Kauten

      Apr 29, 2024

      Jason!!!
      Try to calm down!!!
      You seem to be a very excitable person!!!
      Thanks for your views on Vevor!!!
      Your friend,
      Bob

      Reply
  32. MM

    Jun 21, 2024

    I ended up purchasing the 8-pc set of woodturning chisels by Vevor from Amazon a little while back. I just wanted a basic set, normally I wouldn’t have even considered Vevor but the combination of the low price and the high Amazon reviews was just too good to resist. I figured if they were junk I could always send them back. The price was incredible: the set cost less than $20 after tax for a set of 8 full-size lathe tools, a wooden box, and a freebie wood chisel. Standard price at Amazon was $35.99 but when I bought it there was a 50% off coupon as well.

    The chisels came with a velvet-lined wooden box. It isn’t anything super fancy, you can tell the hinges and the latches are cheap but it’s much nicer than I expected for a kit with a list price of $36. The chisels are excellent. The handles are solid, blades and ferrules are tight, the blades are HSS and they are quite well ground too. A couple of them needed some very minor touchup with a fine stone but I expected a lot worse. I was planning to have to re-sharpen every one in the set but 6 out of the 8 were ready to work right out of the box. There was not a speck of rust anywhere. The parting tool is the plain parallel-sided type rather than the diamond profile so that is a bit of a cost cut but honestly it is hard to complain about the set, its value for money is awesome. Even at Amazon’s “full” $36 price the set is a great deal.

    I would still be wary of Vevor in general, I’ve seen some of their products which appear to be utter garbage, but I’m viewing them like I do Harbor Freight at the moment: some of their products are excellent value, others I would never purchase.

    Reply
  33. John Terry

    Sep 22, 2024

    I think that with Vevor it depends on the particular item that you buy. I would suggest that you check the reviews on the individual item that you are interested in buying. As an example, I think that their twist drill bit sharpener is, maybe, the best that I have ever used and it has rave reviews. I have their 1″ air impact wrench and it is way more powerful than my IR wrench. It is ungodly powerful. My only compliant with it is that it is hhheavy, like 50 lbs., but I only use it when the others won’t get the job done. Their hydraulic knockout punch is , in my opinion, a ridiculously good buy. I tested the hardness of the punches and dies. They were around 45 Rc, I think. Anyway, they were exactly the same as a Greenlee. The Greenlee set is 2000-3000 dollars. Vevor was 150+-. I don’t do enough electrical work to justify the price of a Greenlee set, but I can easily justify the Vevor set. Other things that I would personally recommend: hydraulic toe jacks, machinery skates, hydraulic pullers, ratcheting wire cutters, in my opinion they ( wire cutters) are as good as the best US brands. On a friend’s recommendation I bought a waffle maker and a blender and both seem to be of excellent quality. I have a very well equipped machine shop where I repair and rebuild my own equipment. Even so, I can’t justify some tools, like an expensive knockout punch set that I will use a few times a year. I look at Vevor and others like them to provide me with a tool whose price to use ratio is somewhat justified. I recently bought a fantastic ( my opinion) hydraulic hose machine from Ali express. This thing comes with 10 dies for hoses up to 2 inches ID. It is a beast weighing in at around 800 pounds. Price 2200 dollars delivered to my door which included 25% duty. As few hoses as I need per year, there is no way that I could justify 12,00 dollars for a US machine of equal quality. While it is true that the Chinese make junk, it is also true that they make some pretty good stuff. In my 65 years of living I have gotten plenty of American made junk, generally at much higher prices than the Chinese junk. The good thing is that in this age of the electron, you can get on Youtube and the internet and get a lot of information in a hurry, so, if you want to buy something, research it first instead of complaining after you get it.

    Reply
  34. AlvieC

    Oct 8, 2024

    My friend, I came across this article and you are right, Vevor does not let you know who manufactured whatever it is you buy from them. A couple of years ago, I bought an alleged “commercial stainless steel vent hood and fan. After they arrived, I noticed how flimsy the hood was and the damage to it. I contacted Vevor about it and got the runaround from many different email addresses over a couple of months time. Long story short, I could see I was getting nowhere so I contacted the California AG with a complaint letter, and shortly after, Vevor refunded all the purchase price and shipping costs. Maybe because I pointed out the product was a knock-off of other commercial vent hoods, and they had no UL or NFS labels? Vevor did not want the vent hood or the fan back. My complaint to the AG was the only way I could think of to stop Vevor from giving me the runaround. If you have to deal with Vevor you might need to understand they are expecting you to give up and go away. Keep records of everything. By the way, the vent hood is rusted now after being stored out of the weather since. It was supposed to be stainless.

    Reply
  35. Jonathan Hicks

    Nov 18, 2024

    I got a Vevor S4040 CNC router. Assembly was straightforward. The manual leaves much to desired and could use the attention of a good technical writer. There’s no instructions on how to use the software to run the machine. I did work out how to use the software after watching a YouTube video by an independent user and was delighted how well it works. This is my first time using a Vevor product. I think they would do well to develop their user documentation better, especially for first-time CNC users like myself.

    Reply

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