New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

This forum is intended for users to share places/vendors/surplus centers etc., to visit of machining/metalworking interest. Please be sure to list Name of the venue, City & State, Operating hours, a review and a web link if possible. The intent is so that those planning a trip or visiting your area might be interested in visiting!

Moderators: GlennW, Harold_V

Harrzack
Posts: 14
Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2013 11:03 am

New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by Harrzack »

Located at 628 Sicklerville Road, Sicklerville NJ
Cook Tool and Machine has been in business for over 50 years and has a super selection of older mills, lathes tool, cutters and metal.
Cook also buys complete machine shops - hobby or pro. Their warehouse is a trove of "machine parts & tools" and always a great place to explore.

Find us on EBAY: https://www.ebay.com/str/cookmachinetools

and the web: http://www.cooktoolandmachine.com/
User avatar
Steggy
Posts: 1976
Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2011 9:19 pm
Location: JB Pritzker’s Hellhole
Contact:

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by Steggy »

Harrzack wrote: Wed Feb 12, 2020 8:26 am Located at 628 Sicklerville Road, Sicklerville NJ
Cook Tool and Machine has been in business for over 50 years and has a super selection of older mills, lathes tool, cutters and metal.
Cook also buys complete machine shops - hobby or pro. Their warehouse is a trove of "machine parts & tools" and always a great place to explore.

Find us on EBAY: https://www.ebay.com/str/cookmachinetools

and the web: http://www.cooktoolandmachine.com/
There was an item I was going to purchase until I saw the shipping charges. Why does it cost 27 dollars to ship an item that weighs about 3 pounds?
———————————————————————————————————————————————————————
Music isn’t at all difficult.  All you gotta do is play the right notes at the right time!  :D
Harrzack
Posts: 14
Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2013 11:03 am

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by Harrzack »

You’ll have to battle UPS over the shipping charges. If there was a cheaper way that we could count on, we’d use it. It also depends on how far from NJ the package has to go.i got sticker-shock at $40 to send a DVD to the UK!
SteveM
Posts: 7763
Joined: Mon Jun 27, 2005 6:18 pm
Location: Wisconsin

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by SteveM »

Why not use flat-rate boxes, at least for stuff that will fit?

I was going to order a chunk of 4140ph from a vendor on ebay until I realized they were going to charge $20 for what would go in a small flat-rate box. They refused to use a flat-rate box. They said that USPS didn't meet their standards. From what people here have been saying about UPS, it sounds like their standards are pretty low.

Other than one act of outright theft (package was obviously manually opened, bag inside sliced open and contents removed) I've had pretty good luck with flat-rate boxes.

Steve
John Hasler
Posts: 1852
Joined: Tue Dec 06, 2016 4:05 pm
Location: Elmwood, Wisconsin

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by John Hasler »

I've had excellent luck with USPS. They are almost always less expensive that UPS even when not using flat rate boxes and are always as fast or faster. The only better service I've found is Speed-Dee Delivery. They cover Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin and parts of Michigan, Missouri, and Nebraska.
User avatar
Steggy
Posts: 1976
Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2011 9:19 pm
Location: JB Pritzker’s Hellhole
Contact:

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by Steggy »

Harrzack wrote: Wed Feb 12, 2020 9:39 pm You’ll have to battle UPS over the shipping charges. If there was a cheaper way that we could count on, we’d use it. It also depends on how far from NJ the package has to go.i got sticker-shock at $40 to send a DVD to the UK!
My location is near Chicago and a quick check of UPS commercial rates from your location to mine came out to about 12 dollars for a three pound object with a value under 100 dollars. That assumes commercial-to-commercial shipping—if either address is residential, the rate will be about 20 percent higher.

I'm going to say this publicly, not to yank your chain, but to make it clear what my thoughts are. Package forwarding is one of the most competitive industries in the world, especially in North America, and forwarders are eager to get and keep customers. Given that, I am always suspicious of any on-line vendor who quotes high domestic shipping charges. All-too-often, it is found that a vendor whose shipping charges are higher than average is marking up what they are being charged by the forwarder. We (my company) periodically have product we've ordered shipped against our FedEx account so we can compare what we are charged against the shipping charges quoted by the vendor (if the vendor charges more we become their latest ex-customer). I'm not saying your company is marking up shipping charges, but I mention shipping cost markup because it often happens and may be squelching sales for any company engaged in it.

In my opinion, I think you need to have a frank conversation with your shipping company representative about being competitive. UPS is not the only company in the package-forwarding business and based on my (very long) experience as a businessman, not the best.

BTW, I routinely ship stuff via USPS Priority Mail and have never encountered a problem of any kind. Late delivery is very rare, as is theft of contents.
———————————————————————————————————————————————————————
Music isn’t at all difficult.  All you gotta do is play the right notes at the right time!  :D
User avatar
Steggy
Posts: 1976
Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2011 9:19 pm
Location: JB Pritzker’s Hellhole
Contact:

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by Steggy »

John Hasler wrote: Thu Feb 13, 2020 11:42 am I've had excellent luck with USPS. They are almost always less expensive that UPS even when not using flat rate boxes and are always as fast or faster. The only better service I've found is Speed-Dee Delivery. They cover Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin and parts of Michigan, Missouri, and Nebraska.
We used Speed-Dee a few years ago to ship a computer server (value about 6000 dollars) to a client in Milwaukee. The rate was reasonable and the package arrived on time, safe and sound. As I said above, UPS is not the only game in town.
———————————————————————————————————————————————————————
Music isn’t at all difficult.  All you gotta do is play the right notes at the right time!  :D
John Hasler
Posts: 1852
Joined: Tue Dec 06, 2016 4:05 pm
Location: Elmwood, Wisconsin

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by John Hasler »

I ordered a printer from quill.com over on the other side of Wisconsin yesterday. It arrived today, via an outfit called Capital Express. Shipping was free so I don't know what they charged, but they're worth keeping an eye on.

One of the excuses I've seen for not using USPS is "Their tracking isn't as good as that of UPS." I don't need to know where my package is to within the nearest inch thoughout it's trip. In fact, I don't need to know where it is at all, just when it will be here.

I think that one of the reasons vendors like UPS is that it will provide software that wil seamlessly integrate their systems with UPS's. Of course, it will also seamlessly lock them in...
rrnut-2
Posts: 691
Joined: Mon Jul 18, 2011 7:40 pm
Location: Bennington, NH

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by rrnut-2 »

USPS has gotten a lot better a tracking in the past 5 years or so. Before that, the package would be on my doorstep and their tracking would still say it was in the midwest somewhere. Now, it seems to be spot on and detailed.

Jim B
reggie_obe
Posts: 260
Joined: Sat Jul 24, 2004 6:16 pm
Location: New Jersey

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by reggie_obe »

I was at Cooks very recently, my experience was a bit different.
Only the owner and daughter (part time) remain. Lots of old large machinery, generally not in demand by US industry anymore.
Website photos show a warehouse in the distant past.
Very dark and cramped, bring a good flashlight.
A whole herd of old large mills sitting in the semi-darkness rusting away,
Big stack of granite plates outside, many mishandled and good for rolling out pastry dough or garden pavers.
If he happens to have a piece of tooling you want, the prices aren't bad, but he does covet a bunch of stuff too.
Looked at a radial drill (he had many), 10k for a machine that wouldn't even bring 2k at auction.
If you are going to Fazzio's it might be worth a side trip.
robbieknobbie
Posts: 4
Joined: Sun Mar 14, 2010 8:18 am
Location: PA

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by robbieknobbie »

Yeah, Cook's is dark, and uncomfortably cramped with older machinery, but for me that makes all the more fun to explore. If you are respectful to the owners, they will give you good prices, if you're a weenie, you get the weenie tax.

Its their party, they do what they want.

I haven't been there in maybe 5 years now, but I used to go once or twice a year for at least a decade before that. They have an incredible selection of metalworking stuff, and will go a long way to help you get what you're looking for.

Can't speak to shipping, always went in person.
Andypullen
Posts: 2166
Joined: Thu May 22, 2003 8:17 am
Location: Bel Air, MD

Re: New Jersey: Cook Tool & Machine

Post by Andypullen »

rrnut-2 wrote: Fri Feb 14, 2020 6:17 am USPS has gotten a lot better a tracking in the past 5 years or so. Before that, the package would be on my doorstep and their tracking would still say it was in the midwest somewhere. Now, it seems to be spot on and detailed.

Jim B
They have gotten better, but there still are issues.

My former letter carrier was particularly bad for a while. He was always misdelivering packages. He would go out on his route super early on Saturdays...many times he woke my wife and me up with a package by BANGING on the door. So, I "fought" back. I started buying pieces of 4-1/2" diameter x 8" steel round slugs from a seller on ebay. At the price he sells them for, it's stupid to not buy them nowadays ($25). I have 6 on the floor next to my saw to turn into train wheels. I've probably purchased 10 or 12 from him. He always built a wood box around the steel and put that in the flat rate box. I even bought a locomotive tender kit from Allen Models during the "pandemic" and it was sent via USPS. Watching him carrying that box to my porch was pretty comical. He finally switched routes.

I'm still missing some packages.

One just disappeared....it was very well packed by the shipper. See above. It's probably a doorstop somewhere.

The second was poorly packed by the client. He sent 3 flat rate boxes of castings to me. 3 different tracking numbers. I received one on a Monday. It was a slide valve cylinder casting. The box was almost spherical...how the animals there managed to do that, I have no idea. The second box was the cylinder mating parts. There was a hole in the side of the box. Luckily, only 2 parts were missing. Probably on the bottom of a truck or 2 somewhere. The third box never arrived at all. It was the other cylinder. Replacement castings aren't available. The steam chest parts won't be difficult to manufacture from bar. The replacement cylinder is a big hunk of dura-bar. It's going to be fun to whittle a cylinder out of that.

Andy Pullen
Clausing 10x24, Sheldon 12" shaper, ProtoTrak AGE-2 control cnc on a BP clone, Reed Prentice 14" x 30", Sanford MG 610 surface grinder, Kalamazoo 610 bandsaw, Hardinge HSL speed lathe, Hardinge HC chucker, Kearney and Trecker #2K plain horizontal mill, Haas TL-1 lathe.
Post Reply