Some of you guys would probably be appalled to find out that you can probably get toilet paper cheaper at Costco or Dollar General than from a full service supplier like Grainger.
I always buy toilet paper at Costco. So, maybe I'm not "some of you guys." I suppose you could probably buy it from Grainger, but I haven't seen a Grainger catalog for years. They have it at ULine, too, where I do have an account I used to use to buy cardboard boxes. But, I buy TP from Costco, because that's the cheapest source I have access to.
See, I'm not really calling out Grainger. They serve a different clientele that me. They're a wholesale outlet that focuses on corporate and government customers. The point of my post was the folly of spending $50 per tool for a highly-respected tool company. That's the cost per item of their 1000-something toolset. That simply makes no sense at all. If someone says it makes sense, they aren't thinking about this in any rational way.
Yes, Grainger's customers do not spend that much. Probably half of that, but even $25 per tools is essentially outrageous. That is my point. And yet, the fact that they offer such a set of tools at such a high price shifts the expectation of cost upward. The same thing applies to companies like Snap-On and MAC tools, who sell to individuals from tool trucks, for prices that are far higher than from other suppliers for similar tools.
The difference in quality is not that much, really. I have one Snap-On tool in my tool box. It's a 3/8" drive 3/4" wobble socket that I bought at a garage sale for 50 cents. It's a nice wobble socket, but I wouldn't pay the Snap-On price for one. I have a set of wobble sockets in both SAE and Metric sizes. I use them from time to time. The Snap-On one and the other ones I own work just fine. None of them have ever broken, and I've had them for decades. I used them as they were intended to be used. They aren't ever going to break. None of them. So, the 50 cent Snap-On one isn't really any better than the other ones I own. They all work just fine. I wouldn't buy a new one from the Snap-On truck. I won't need to.
Grainger doesn't charge its customers less for that tool set. In fact, it charges them more, because they have to buy from Grainger, because they have a contract and must choose suppliers from a list of approved suppliers. So, Grainger can actually charge more. I haven't had a Grainger account for a very, very long time. I never found a real need for it.
I'm interested in the individual tool buyer, not the corporate or government one. I find that Proto master tool set to be a joke. A very, very expensive joke. Proto was once a top tier tool company. Now, it's just part of Stanley. I have some old Proto tools from the 50s and 60s. I like them. But, I like all the tools in my tool box, whatever their source. If I didn't, I would have replaced them at some point.
I just don't buy tools based on the name imprinted on the tool. Nope. I don't have many Harbor Freight tools, either. There's not a store nearby where I live.