Having read through a few of the similar threads on here, I noticed that, whilst most understand that Snap On dealers are independent franchise owners, and that sometimes there are some who may have some "deficiencies" in their customer service and development skills, hardly anyone seems to acknowledge that MAC, MATCO and any other "truck brand" dealers are also independent franchise owners are are subject to exactly the same variability in "skills".
It is also fairly common for these "deficient" dealers to find they are not making it work with the franchise they have and switch to another brand, thereby applying their own brand of service to that brand. Usually, after two failed tries, they blame the whole tool industry and go work for the DMV.
Many moons ago, I had 3 dealers a week coming round my shop, one was a Snap On dealer who was winding down before retiring, He'd change anything you like and didn't really care how it broke, but didn't like ordering in anything he didn't have. Another was a Disillusioned Snap On dealer who had switched to MAC, he was a nice guy, and a pretty good salesman, but spent far too much time round my shop, drinking my coffee to be making any serious money out of it (he's the guy that disappeared leaving me with a basically free Welder and Rollcab). The third was an independent, also an ex snap-on dealer, who carried the odd stuff that Snap on don't, like consumables and SK, SP & Facom specialist tools.
I've had a dozen SO dealers over the years, only one ever raised an eyebrow over a warranty repair, an old 70's 3/8 torque wrench that kept smashing ratchet kits. He did fix it, but grumbled a bit. I later found out that the proper Torque wrench rebuild kit wasn't available anymore, and that he'd "fixed" it with parts from 3 different standard ratchet kits.