mngundog
Well-known member
I don't own a single Snap-on wrench, but the lettering font between the two wrenches are distinctly different.Post #61 did it for me. The protruding box is unique and it's not the only detail done poorly.
I don't own a single Snap-on wrench, but the lettering font between the two wrenches are distinctly different.Post #61 did it for me. The protruding box is unique and it's not the only detail done poorly.
It's called VevorChina counterfeits their own counterfeit stuff.

Agreed. Snapon box ends have a distinctly shallow chamfer. Everything else looks passable but the chamfer we see on these wrenches is not Snap-on.I have seen a lot of Snap-on wrenches and something is off about those, especially that heavy chamfer.
Are all the date codes the same?
Agreed. Snapon box ends have a distinctly shallow chamfer. Everything else looks passable but the chamfer we see on these wrenches is not Snap-on.
Kinda bizarre that they would match all the other details so closely but miss that detail.
As shown by the white paper, after 10000 strikes the part they were stamping grew by 1.6mm in one dimension. While its not the same die as snap on is using, we simply don't know how far they let the dies wear before replacing. The forgings indubitably will grow in length.The overall length is off by a decent amount. The overall length of the 15mm wrench, for example, is off by 1/4in. These 2 details are things that would have to be consistent. The parts of the job that are done by hand won’t change overall length and the lettering of the stamping. That’s just 2 details. There are others.
Yes, but you have wrenches from different years to compare. Stamping dies wear out quickly as well. The die blocks on the bed or ram have adjustments and how much care is put into setting and again, the forging is growing until its die is replaced, since they locate the wrench on the fixture via a hand sanded surface at 1:38The lettering is off and that is a stamping machine as seen in the video. That has to be the same one wrench to the next.
Don't watch the simpsons much?Ha! @Firebrick43 ... "Indubitably"... had a friend used that word camping about 20 years ago we still bust his chops about it. Don't recall ever seeing it used by anyone else. Anyway carry on, not criticizing just made me laugh![]()
If you are saying that there is not enough evidence here to say that these are phony, you know where to buy them. The differences are too much to convince me. Not to mention everything else about them, about the seller, the circumstantial evidence.As shown by the white paper, after 10000 strikes the part they were stamping grew by 1.6mm in one dimension. While its not the same die as snap on is using, we simply don't know how far they let the dies wear before replacing. The forgings indubitably will grow in length.
I machined large diesel rods for several years and then maintained the machines that did so after. Even though we were maintaining +/- .008mm and .013mm tolerances on the pin and crank bores the forgings themselves had a +/- 2mm tolerance and sometimes that was allowed to be higher depending on where it was out with engineers approval as measured on the CMM machine.
And then a worker uses a high speed belt grinder to grind on both ends which definitely will have an effect on length as well. This can be seen at time stamps 1:33 for the open end and 1:38 on the box end. The operators skill, start of shift or end of shift, and even how fresh the belt is on the grinder is going to affect how much metal is taken off that directly affects length, even from shift to shift.
I don't know if you have used a big industrial Kalamazoo or burr king belt grinder, but a 1/4" is half of a Mississippi or less with a fresh belt.
If you were to measure a larger sample size and you will be surprised how much they vary, I know I was when I measured several.
Yes, but you have wrenches from different years to compare. Stamping dies wear out quickly as well. The die blocks on the bed or ram have adjustments and how much care is put into setting and again, the forging is growing until its die is replaced, since they locate the wrench on the fixture via a hand sanded surface at 1:38
The font in the pic you posted is a match to my friend’s known good Snap on wrenches. It differs from the wrenches I received.I have SOXRM set with age codes from 2023/2024 and the lettering is more like yours compared to all my other Snap-on wrenches which are older. Can't be 100% sure, because I don't share same lighting as in your pictures.
My old SOEXM10 that have seen melting accident and the one that replaced it are different. Chroming looks different. Aged in use. There is around 1mm difference where the bent starts. Box end on the new one is slightly thicker. Box end chamfer is slightly different. Old is more sharp and newer is more rounded. Older is from 2012 and can't really tell what it is. Maybe 2014 or 2017. Bought it from my Snap-on dealer earlier this year. Both from Snap-on dealers. Overall length is within 1mm.
Open end mouth measured from roughly the same spot are within 0.1 mm between SOXRM15A from 2023, SOXRRM15 from 2017 and SOEXM15 from 1991 (PAT PEND).
The problem is that the tolerances are sloppy and the steel and chrome are of unknown quality. And I don’t like the deep chamfer. A deep chamfer means less engagement.So it's counterfeited wrenches at a too-good-to-be-true price?
What's the problem? they look like usable wrenches.
Sticking it to Snap On was the goal here, regardless. Expecting two forged steel wrenches to be completely identical, seems a bit silly anyway.
Actually, no, but that explains alot probably where my buddy got it from!Don't watch the simpsons much?
If he is Gen X, there was a cereal commercial in the late 80’s where Jimmy Durante says indubitably a lot of times.Actually, no, but that explains alot probably where my buddy got it from!
Everyone knows the drill, or at least we should.And I highly doubt sticking it to snap on was the goal. I would bet that someone simply decided there was money to be made with this endeavor.
Maybe they are sold elsewhere globally as "wrenches" with some other name (maybe even SO) stamped on them.The math doesn’t add up for just a few sets. And if this was happening, there had to be a lot, really a whole lot, more of them.
No patent numbers.@impactims
Do any of the wrenches have the patent number on the back?
I would agree with this as long as all we are talking about is Snap on product advertised as new on a platform such as eBay. Even more so if new, on eBay and at a low price point.Everyone knows the drill, or at least we should.
Snap On tools are top quality, but they are also very expensive. Buy them from Snap On. If one can't afford them or too cheap to pay the price, buy something different.
Otherwise, buying them dirt cheap elsewhere, it should almost almost a given, there is likely nefarious activity involved. Sure some sell them at a discount, which real SO buyers will like, but then why sell cheap? Usually it's to drag in the "too-good-to-be true" buyers, or the poor who want to look better off.
Snap-On sells tools industrially, at lower prices than mechanics get on a truck, and also offers significant discounts to students in trade school on some tools and tool sets (50%?), which may be the same as the industrial discount.If you are saying that there is not enough evidence here to say that these are phony, you know where to buy them. The differences are too much to convince me. Not to mention everything else about them, about the seller, the circumstantial evidence.
I am saying that the differences that you have measured and have actually published in this thread, are less than I have measured and others have measured of snap on wrenches from known genuine sources.If you are saying that there is not enough evidence here to say that these are phony, you know where to buy them. The differences are too much to convince me. Not to mention everything else about them, about the seller, the circumstantial evidence.
Looking carefully at the posted pics, you're gonna make the robster angryMeasure the greatest thickness of your 16mm open end wrench and post it, also measure the actually open end jaw width and post it, not in the FDX groove
Snap On Industrial has different part numbers on the tool, and sometimes different tools, I have a chrome 1-1/4" 3/4" drive 6 point socket never offered through the Snap On mechanics catalog, years and years ago some dealers were both industrial and retail and I suspect this is how I got the socket in the 1970's, it's cracked and comes back as Industrial only no life time warranty, in fact my current dealer can't even order a replacement to buy.Snap-On sells tools industrially, at lower prices than mechanics get on a truck, and also offers significant discounts to students in trade school on some tools and tool sets (50%?), which may be the same as the industrial discount.
Snap-On also made US military General Mechanics Tool Kits, after Armstrong went under, and a bunch of those have wound up on eBay, as have individual tools and tool sets from the kits, since there is likely more profit margin, and quicker, in the broken up kits.
I haven’t reread the thread to tell if impactims actually mentioned what the wrench set cost, but 25% of normal Snap-On site listed retail price could certainly be a genuine price for a surplus flipper offering genuine non-counterfeit product.
Basically a flipper gets surplus Snap-On, and knows that students pay half this.
The students also get a Snap-On account for warrantees, which surplus wrenches won’t have. (Officially).
He then offers the kits at 25% retail, presuming he paid less than that, which is fully possible for surplus purchased at auction, or bankruptcy sale.
As far as the differences between the Snap-On wrenches, it’s fully possible over time and batches, and human variation for that to happen, as Firebrick43 said.
Two wrenches a few years apart both supposedly produced by Snap-On should likely have consistent steel alloy, for the same type and model of wrench, since Snap-On is apparently very good at that, and I would presume the strength should be within 5% on two separate wrenches, but both of those would take destructive testing.
I think the same.Post #61 did it for me. The protruding box is unique and it's not the only detail done poorly.
Measurements aside, the box end is still totally different. The open end is still quite different. The measurements and weights are just circumstantial evidence.I am saying that the differences that you have measured and have actually published in this thread, are less than I have measured and others have measured of snap on wrenches from known genuine sources.
We have had similar discussions in the past. And its not just snap on, I know there is variation in wright as well and I assume nearly all wrenches made is similar way. I only know one series of wrench that is CNC machined entirely.
Measure the greatest thickness of your 16mm open end wrench and post it, also measure the actually open end jaw width and post it, not in the FDX groove
That is just one wrench correct?Measurements aside, the box end is still totally different.
Wouldn't the one wrench's box end be circumstantial evidence as well?The open end is still quite different. The measurements and weights are just circumstantial evidence.

Every singe one was off by a decent amount. A few thousandths to upwards of 10 thousandths. Some were undersized and others were oversized.
Heck, even OVERALL LENGTH is off.
I call BS on this set of wrenches.
At a glance, they look legit. But somehow all the detail is off.
Not quite as bad as 61 but I had 3 wrenches with significant chamfer out of a SOEXM710 set and a OEX710 set. All the other wrenches were nearly flat or very minimal chamfer. A 13/16 shown, a 13mm and 9/16 were the other two but not as severe.If you really think these are legit, post some pics of true SO with box ends that match post #61.

That is just one wrench correct?
Wouldn't the one wrench's box end be circumstantial evidence as well?
You were quite sure 0.010" was proof that it was a fake? But now you don't post measurements on one size of wrench to see how inconsistent they are as its just circumstantial?
I'd need to have zero doubts when I picked them up to use them.
I already sent them back.If my gut told me I got duped based on what I'm seeing I'd send them back no matter what anyone on the forum said.
No offense to anyone here but I'd need to have zero doubts when I picked them up to use them.
If they are all like the one you pictured then maybe. Or maybe they were rejects at the factory and someone johnny cash them?@Firebrick43
I get the “Dave” thing….
But a completely different shape? And every wrench in the set being that exact different shape? This looks more like being made properly, but elsewhere with different tooling than a goof-ball using correct tooling and screwing up in the process. Because if this were the case, not every wrench in the set would have the same exact oddity. I don’t think anyways.
And the goof-ball theory does not explain the oddity of this seller having so many of them and them being all brand new with no factory Snap on plastic tray and packaging. Amongst other oddities about the whole deal.
If they are all like the one you pictured then maybe. Or maybe they were rejects at the factory and someone johnny cash them?
I did ask.Did I miss the part where you asked the seller where they came from?