refried
Well-known member
why not be the person with the tools and knowledge, if your giving away jobs because you don't have the propper tools your giving money to someone that could be in your pocket.
Yes I would. Because the hack with subpar skills and the latest technology will kill you. A skilled doc will do the absolute best they can given the tools they have to work with. And if the task exceeds the ability of their tools (or knowledge if they are good) will refer you to a counterpart whom has the skills and the equipment.
Mechanics are no different really. The man holding the wrench is the 95% of the equation.
24" 1/2" drive. I've got a mastercraft, (I'm Canadian) Got it for $9.00. I've had a 6 foot cheater on it, no issues.
I am going to agree with this. I asked a friend who is a lead xray tech for large hospital about surgical skill. I saw some work in video that was sub par to Norms cabnit chisel finsih work by far, I suspect many have higher failure rates and problems simply due to lack of detail skill of a craftsman, just cause you took the class and squeak by you got the licence dont make you talented.
I called her when assessing a back surgeon, she commented about crude work, it has to be a factor at that level. I really would like Norm doing my joint replacement,,,
hahahaha!!!X3. Best does not equal most expensive but I guess bragging rights are often more important than functionality.
sounds nasty.......
stretched out sockets and sloppy worn out ratchets
...
Because those are the tools that are available to you. Like I said the tool is a very small fraction of the equation. If a skilled user realizes the tool is subpar for the job he will replace it with the appropriate tool. The tool does not make the tech or in the case of your example the doctor, their knowledge does.If your a skilled craftsman you'll want the best tools available, Sure you could rebuild an engine with stretched out sockets and sloppy worn out ratchets but why would you want to?
I dont get where we got to use worn out sloppy tools. I have to serve a load a little higher than myself on some days on rare occasions outfit a crew so I need enough to meet demand, quality not such an issue but there isnt a tool in my box not service worthy. It would be removed or replaced if it couldnt meet the demand or its quality not obvious.If your a skilled craftsman you'll want the best tools available, Sure you could rebuild an engine with stretched out sockets and sloppy worn out ratchets but why would you want to?
I need 1 breaker bar for my engine class. I'm gonna include it in my first snap on student order.
If you were to have only 1 breaker bar (especially for tearing down/rebuilding a pushrod v8, if that purpose makes a difference), what would it be?
3/8" longest I think around 12" $32
1/2" 18" long $52
1/2" 24" long $57
If the truth be known when I see a dr/lawyer/candlestick maker w/obscenely expensive waiting room stuff
I know I'm in the wrong place because
either
their clients are paying for the stuff thru inflated charges
or
they themself lack responsibility (fiscal in this case).... and that lack might carry over to their areas of expertise!!
Same goes for blue collar service folk.... esp blue collar service folk!!
How long is that $.99 philips screwdriver going to last befor the tip is worn? If it strips the head of a screw that now has to be drilled out and waste a half hour, thats costing money. Using an adjustable wrench is another sign of a lazy mechanic, I would never do it and would never want anyone working for me using one. use the propper wrench.
I agree, if I saw a mechanic using these I would lose all respect for them..
http://buy1.snapon.com/catalog/item...roup_ID=682242&store=snapon-store&dir=catalog
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I have that one too and it's a steal for the price...especially with lifetime warranty. Just don't get the ratcheting one as it's a piece of junk. It's supposed to be on sale right now for $9.99.
half an hour w/all those fancy dan, high dollar tools?How long is that $.99 philips screwdriver going to last befor the tip is worn? If it strips the head of a screw that now has to be drilled out and waste a half hour, thats costing money. Using an adjustable wrench is another sign of a lazy mechanic, I would never do it and would never want anyone working for me using one. use the propper wrench.
I'll be honest, if I only had one breaker bar it wouldn't be a Snap On. No need to spend that kind of money on a breaker bar, even at 50% off.
Out of the options, I'd go with the longest 1/2" drive. Although, a long 3/8 drive is nice. I bought one from HF (16" ? long) and I absolutely love it. Unfortunately I can't find a USA made one that long. I broke a number of 1/2-3/8 reducers using a 1/2 breaker, so I wanted a long 3/8.
get the matco 30" breaker bar.
I agree, if I saw a mechanic using these I would lose all respect for them..
http://buy1.snapon.com/catalog/item...roup_ID=682242&store=snapon-store&dir=catalog
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Hey dude, I'm sorry. Next time you are thinking of buying a snap on tool just go with your gut feeling of what you will need. Do not ask the garage journal as you now know how that will turn out.
Again I'm sorry. Enjoy which ever snap on breaker you choose. It will last you a lifetime.
I van
The 24'' is only $5 more. It's a no-brainer.
Yeah, the ratcheting one *****. However, it does fix itself to be better. Once the ratchet head seizes up, it's a great fixed head abuse bar!
op I think you deserve both.