I bought this set of replaceable cords, not for the brand they intended them to be for, but they have generically to replace on many of my worn out elbow areas of different various mechanics tools. A lot of my older but better made I believe woodworking tools had their power cords being the weakest links.Looking forward to doing some refrigeration for some of my favorite tools and soon as I get them done, I’ll try to post the pictures and some new onesFor 30+ years ago, and you really can’t tell us an old tool minus the cord frayingOlder tools are worth fixing because they were made with heavier quality parts. Unlike your bulk box doors that sell stuff so cheap that even the motor is part of the plastic housing of the tool and you can’t replace those parts easily as the whole thing explodes.The bonus is you get a new pliable cord. You increased the value of your tool again and you can pass this on down to your family. They should get quite a lifetime out of it.I wish I had more to add to this, but until I get the time to focus on tool repair, my priority is lawn and storms are coming as I live close to the coast in North Carolina. It’s good to have a ground cable back in those days, they didn’t have that very often.Also, remind me that I was Will friends old 10 inch craftsman circular saw and it is a complete metal body with a mechanical on off Toggle switch that’sActing like the saw is 24 hours a day left plugged in so I’m gonna open that one up and definitely replace its cord With one of these. Remember these cores are meant to be flexed and pulled, and the carrier higher amperage, which is better at keeping your tool running cooler. I hope this helps and have a safe.