Your taking it a little to literally and missing the point.. doesnt have to be a wrench, socket or ratchet it could be anything. When that rusted bolt you are trying to get off is a little bit rounded and the HF wrench rounds it more and won't get it off and the snap on would have.. same goes for sockets. Or when the open end spreads and you spend half the day at the ER. I have snap on at work and craftsman/HF at home.. When I get home from work I notice the difference immediatly and I really appreciate my snap on tools. They get the job done at home but try using them professionally working flat rate and youll find out real quick it aint gonna cut it. When you use tools 50+hrs a week professionally trying to beat book times you WILL notice the difference and understand. The regular weekend warrior doesn't need snap on.. Mechanics aren't stupid like the general public thinks we are if we could make our living with 3k in HF tools instead of 30k in snap on, we definetly would.
Sounds like to me People need to toughen up, When i go to work i like having a brand new Evolution locomotive engine with A/C and plush seats but there are times when my employer packs me into a 1975 Sd-60 with No Ac, Toadstool seats (The most uncomfortable seat around). If the engines are in tip top shape HP is HP regardless of the extras. I do believe that in the near future you will see more and more Mechanics using HF tools. This country is in the pisser and people are gonna learn how to adapt and get the job done. If they dont they will fail and there are plenty of Craiglist/ebay ads to document this in the Auto industry.


It is becoming impossible to stay away from TAIWAN and cheaper imports for certain things I am not willing to spend the high $$$ for