nissan_crawler
Well-known member
No offense, but with a box that size, and the age of your tools, I can see why you say Snap-On no matter what.
No offense, but with a box that size, and the age of your tools, I can see why you say Snap-On no matter what.
They're 3/8. They actually came from eBay. The 2 standard size 3/8 drive ratchets are from 1947 and 1959... the 1959 one has a new rebuild kit in it so it's good as new. The long 3/8 ratchet is only around 10 years old, the 1/4 ratchet is probably 15 years old, and the speeder, a Par-X, is from the early 80s. The screwdrivers are old, but I prefer the old style handles...Did you dad give you your 1/2" drive ratchets? They look to be 40s-50s vintage! Still going strong!
For him to buy new just the box and the tools you showed, would probably be $4000 alone for the box, sockets, and the plier drawer.
Another brand would likely be a blob of rust by now.


Yeh, I'd call it a general set, however, not cheap ****.
I've done plenty of work with MATCO and Craftsman... MATCO just feels like everything is just a cheap version of the Snap-on equivelant, and Craftsman (except for S-K made C-Pro wrenches), just FEELS like weekend "mechanic" tools.


You know the old saying, though... you only rent beer....... tools, if you don't leave them in every car you work on, will last you a lifetime.

I have had around six times as many catastrophic fails of Snap on tools then any other brand.
Odd, I work on aircraft, and my craftsman's are just as good as my snap-ons.


regular sockets/extensions - Craftsman
ratchets - Snappy
swivel sockets/crowfeet - Snappy
Wrenches - Craftsman Pro
Pliers - Knipex (see aktoolsonline.com)
Hammers - estwing
Breaker bars - MAC
screwdrivers - I prefer Snappy soft grip, but wera, wiha, witte, many good brands

The 40's 50's vintage were my favorite Snap on ratchets. I love my F70's.
Let me just put it this way: most techs I know, those who care about the quality of their work (tries to obtain quality US made parts, uses torque wrench on lugs nuts, etc. etc.), use mostly Snap-on.
"Techs" that just want to get the job done and out the door with no regard for the quality of their work, generally have a mix of whatever cheapest tools were on sale from sears or the no-name tool truck.
What a Load of
Craftsman is your friend starting out. Your results may vary. Do not get sucked into that tool ego thing. A real tech can fix anything with any brand of tool.WELL SAID FEDWRENCH![]()
For the cost of a small starter set of Snap on. You can get a master set of other tools that can and do last just as long.