Proof of Payment – 1955

So I was flipping through a 1955 issue of Car Craft Magazine and the slip above fell out. Apparently, a man named Ernie Perez had charged up a $1,100 bill to Snap-On in 1955 and was paying it off $2 a week. At that rate, Ernie’s bill would be all paid up around 1966 or so.

It got me thinking about a question I’ve always wondered about, but never asked. When I was a parts manager at a custom bike shop in college, I was always mesmerized by the HUGE “mortgage” our mechanics would build up with the Snap-On and Mac trucks. I mean, these guys were making less than I was (a college student), but many of them were more than $20k in the tool hole.

So, here’s the question… Does anyone have a statistic on how many of these “mechanic loans” go bad? I don’t recall a whole lot of paperwork behind these deals. It was just, “Yeah man, give me $50 a month for a few years and we will call it even.”

It all seems crazy to me… and I wonder how much of this craziness is built in to the high prices of both Snap-On and Mac.

(27) Comments on the H.A.M.B.

Through the years we’ve had some pretty amazing articles pop up here on The Garage Journal. The following is just a few of them:

  • Pass/Fail

    Love the prices of discount tool houses, but not the quality? Learn which cheap tools make the grade and which don’t right here.

  • Two Car Garage Gallery

    Have a typical two-car garage and want to use it as effinciently as possible? You’ve come to the right place for ideas. Check it out.

  • Nimrod’s Domain

    Our favorite work shop in the world… You can’t buy cool and you can’t by atmosphere. Nimrod proves it!

  • The BMW House

    Need space to hold Bavarian’s finest? No sweat. Just follow this build from start to finish for some incredible ideas. Check it out.

  • The Bunker Garage

    It’s huge, gorgeous, and almost done… Check it out here.