elidas
Well-known member
I'd better be carefull. I just turned 70.While the gentleman in question may be in good health, I'm going to burst some bubbles and inform you that 70 is old.
I'd better be carefull. I just turned 70.While the gentleman in question may be in good health, I'm going to burst some bubbles and inform you that 70 is old.
In the Midwest, here, $42k is house. Not a nice house but a house.I bought a set of short OEX wrenches in 1997 off my local SnapOn dealer, OEX80 through 0EX440. Part of the set came as a 5/16" through 3/4" boxed set, the dealer had taken out the 1/2" to warranty a broken wrench for someone recently and he cut me a deal on the open package, the rest were sold as individual wrenches. The total cost was $1,160. The 1/4", 9/32, 11/32, 15/32, and sizes 13/16" and over were all sold individually then. I was never completely happy that various sizes in the set had to be an older series with the old logo since they dropped a few of the sizes over the years. Try finding a 15/32" on the truck today.
I would have preferred the set to be all one series, not half OEX and OEX-B wrenches. Over the years I've accumulated both series of wrenches in all the sizes made, if for no other reason then to complete both sets. They rarely get used these days.
A current 21pc set of the same wrenches shows as $1460, and they dropped a couple of sizes over the years.
Your neighbor sounds like a guy I used to go fishing with years ago, he'd do anything to get out of the house, she henpecked him to death over the slightest little things. When she died, his daughters both took over. They had all his stuff sold or given away years before he ever showed any signs of decline. It got so bad he used to ask me to keep things because he never knew what they were going to give away next.
They felt since he was 'old' he should act his age and live like a retired old man. He blew his stack one year when both daughters bought him fancy canes for Christmas. I never once saw him walk with a cane, or need one. He outlived both daughters, (58 and 72), passing away at close to 100 still in living his own house. The worst thing kids can do to a parent is make them less active or take away their hobbies or pastimes.
I do find that selling things lately is like pulling teeth, everyone wants it for almost nothing.
My old boss retired recently and is planning a move to FL on some golf course. He had been trying to sell his tool box, most of his specialty tools, and his wood working tools but got almost no response from CL or FB. His box it tiny, only a KRL722 combo, no lockers, no side cabs in red. He put the box up for $2K but got no takers. He had a few guys come out and look but one wanted to make payments, another wanted to trade for work, and one wanted it for $500. He paid over $8k for it around 2005 or so but he never worked out of that box, he bought it then moved up to a managers job and took the box home. It sat in his garage ever since covered in blankets unused.
He had more box than tools as long as I knew him. But large boxes are better security since they're not likely to be just hauled away in a pickup truck.
If that KRL1001/1201 set were mine, I'd be looking for $5500 or so for it.
Like anyone, I'd love to find one for cheap and I'm sure there are a few out there to be had for a song but finding one that's not been abused or worn out is tough. How some guys tear up tool boxes is beyond me. Aside from many a roller slide going bad on a heavy drawer once in a while, things like dents and scratches are just a sign of carelessness.
I strongly prefer the older boxes though if only for the fact that its what I'm accustomed to.
When I left my last mechanics job, most every guy in that shop had at least a $60k loan with Snapon, and some newer guys were even higher. We called it tool box envy, one guy would buy a monster box, then the next guy had to one up him, until every last box in the shop looked like an apartment building. One guy blew $42k on a monster tool box. I couldn't ever imagine being in debt that much just for my box. Let alone at only 23 years old. From my experiences, most techs spend about 60% of what they make on their tools and tool box over their first 20 or so years wrenching. About half of them never do stick with it long enough to pay off their tool debt and end up just walking away from it all.
I've got a buddy who paid over $25k for a four bank Snapon box in the 2000's and has been trying to sell it now for 10 years for a third of that but hasn't had a single taker or so much as one person show up to look or buy it. He bought it to keep his baseball card and coin collection in which soon outgrew the box.
The problem with that is that you can't take your house to work and park it next to your work area.In the Midwest, here, $42k is house. Not a nice house but a house.
Sorry, no cushion grip tools in the lot.Tell her I'm after two flexheads
THLF72 - 1/4" long 21cm red - $141
SHF80A - 1/2" standard! 45cm red - $241
Would gladly pay $130 shipped to Athens, Greece.
In the daughter's defence, Ebay now forces on you some "global shipping programme" **** with taxes and mandatory customs which makes shipping rates astronomical... Cant list anything internationally without it, yes there is global interest for snapon but that thing has killed it...




Every time I buy a new tool, I buy it in both metric and SAE. I don't get to decide which tool I want to use, the fastener decides that for me..... and I need to have whatever tool the fastener requires in order for me to work on that particular vehicle/machine/thing.SAE tools are a hard sell, everyone wants metric... and new toolboxes are bought on payments.
link for the Snap-On short wrench set?My father has in the last year put a roof on and built a deck for other people. He still works, remodels and repairs houses. He will be 90 come September.
I have had a 14 piece Snap-On short wrench set on eBay for a couple months now, no bite at $160. Since this thread started, I listed a Bug-O system starting bid 99 cents. No takers. It was over 20,000 new in 1981. As my old friend, now deceased, used to say, “Splain me dat!”
$30k in diagnostic equipment? What exactly would that entail?The problem with that is that you can't take your house to work and park it next to your work area.
With as much as guys have invested in their tools, they need to be able to lock them up in something super secure when they go home at night. I'd venture to guess that most dealer techs have well over $150k invested in their tools and box after a few years in the business.
Its not hard to have $30k wrapped up in just diagnostic equipment and software these days, maybe more if your working on multiple brands.
The cost of tools vs what the job pays these days is why I got out of it years ago. Tools and boxes have tripled or more in price but mechanic wages haven't budged in 25 years around here. Dealer labor rates are over $200/hr, but techs are making less than they did in the 90's. Its no wonder there's a shortage of top notch techs out there these days.
Great minds think alike. I looked & can't find it.link for the Snap-On short wrench set?
A snap on Zeus. A complete Pico Scope Setup. Subscriptions to GM, Ford, Toyota and Honda and possibly Chrysler. Throw in a top of the line Autel or Launch for the foreign stuff and that should pretty much take care of 30K.$30k in diagnostic equipment? What exactly would that entail?
I don’t know how to send a link. Check Mullerick for seller name.link for the Snap-On short wrench set?
There must be more to the story. Is she doing local pick up only or shipping smaller items? Granted, the used market for SAE tools is lower than for metric
This.Selling stuff on eBay is a skill. <snip> to get top dollar for used stuff requires work.
You forgot a GM Tech 1A, and Tech 2, a Ford NGS (up to around 2005) and IDS system for newer than 2005 vehicles, For Mopar, a DRB, DRBII, DRBIII, and wiTech. None of which are cheap to own but pretty much a necessity in a dealership or any serious repair shop.A snap on Zeus. A complete Pico Scope Setup. Subscriptions to GM, Ford, Toyota and Honda and possibly Chrysler. Throw in a top of the line Autel or Launch for the foreign stuff and that should pretty much take care of 30K.
Anybody that gets into automotive repair nowadays is NUTS, STUPID or both. If you're smart enough to repair a modern car you're smart enough to do something else that will not destroy your body and pay you peanuts. It's just a rotten deal all the way around compared to working in an air conditioned office. It's 114F in Phoenix today. Let's work our asses off, get greasy and dirty and get paid nothing in a non-air-conditioned shop. This ******** we see on the news every day is disgusting. Unemployment is at an all-time low and everybody's hiring. Yea, for **** jobs that pay nothing and you have to drive 50 miles each way to get to with gas being $6 a gallon. Whoopi **** what a deal!You forgot a GM Tech 1A, and Tech 2, a Ford NGS (up to around 2005) and IDS system for newer than 2005 vehicles, For Mopar, a DRB, DRBII, DRBIII, and wiTech. None of which are cheap to own but pretty much a necessity in a dealership or any serious repair shop.
I paid $3,200 for a new Ford NGS in 1999, and that didn't include any updates. The price has come down a bit as the platform is less and less common but the last i checked they still get $3k for a new one with the most recent software. This is probably the cheapest of group listed above. A Snap-on Zeus is over $10k for the base unit. An OTC Encore will run you $3k for the base unit, then you need the software and subscriptions, the OTC Genisis is around $1,500, plus software and updates every year.
Then if the shop your at don't have manuals or Alldata, your looking at that subscription as well. (Most around here pretty much assume the tech will find the info on his own phone when needed and do nothing in the line of supplying manuals or tech info.)
Having all the OEM tools isn't absolutely a requirement unless you work in a dealer with those brands Most shops supply one for the whole shop, since you get paid flat rate, and most shops have 20+ guys, waiting to get your hands on the one dealer supplied diag tool can cost you a ton of money.
I really don't see how guys do it these days, the wages in dealer shops hasn't increased, its gone down over the past 20 years. The last big dealer that paid well closed up 24 years ago and I never looked back. I worked for another 6 years for a private shop but they too closed up when the owner sold the location to someone who built a strip mall. When I last worked as an A rate tech I was at $28.90/hr in 2007 and low man in large private shop. In my dealership days I did mostly transmission overhauls, at the private shop it was mostly electrical work and driveability concerns. I just saw an ad for a local dealer looking to higher trained techs for $15.50/$17.00/$18.50/hr flat rate. With what tools and gas costs now its no wonder there's no takers for those jobs. Most all brands used to have really good training that kept guys up to date on new models and new systems, most techs went to factory training for a couple weeks each year. By the end of the 90's, that was gone, techs were on their own for training. Depending on the brand, some training was available at work through a closed networks, (some dealers would pay you a few hours a week to sit and watch videos, but most would not. Many required you do your training time at home on your own time.
Then you have the ASE certifications, which for a long time meant something, but slowly dealers and employers quit paying and guys quit bothering since most OEM dealers wouldn't recognize ASE. For the aftermarket, ASE stayed the recognized certification, yet almost no employer would pay for the tests even 20 years ago. At that point just a basic master tech recertification test lot could cost a tech hundreds, for me, I had all of them at one point, but the dealer refused to pay for recert tests so I let it go in the 90's. I had both car and truck certs, plus automotive machine shop, L1 and L2, and all the autobody and collision certs.
Toward the end of the 90's, they even expected us to supply our own transportation to any factory training that still existed, which was almost always hundreds of miles away. The last factory training I took was at GM school, which was a four day stay 300 miles away. That shop, an AC/Delco service center, gave me a car, arranged for a motel, and paid all expenses. I didn't mind going if it didn't cost me money plus lose me a weeks paycheck. That was in 2005. The following year they expected us to pay out of pocket. No one went. A year later they were no longer factory affiliated with GM. I actually had one shop that told me not to plan anything for my vacation because I needed to use that time for training if I were to maintain my factory certifications. I made plans but they including me loading my box on a roll back.
I can't wait to see what happens when they expect a bunch of minimum wage techs to work on EV's and hybrids.
These days we have a handful of smaller dealers that pay near minimum, I can't imagine how guys afford tools at those wages, plus they're paying half their health insurance, their uniforms, and paying for their own training and testing. I think most guys get a look at their first few paychecks and bail out and go get a job that don't require such an investment. .
25 years ago companies were already requiring writers and managers have college degrees, now a few are requiring it for their techs too. It started with a few programs that issued young techs a 'Degree in automotive technologies" for about a $3k per year, five year training deal where they went to school for half the year and worked for 10 weeks each year in the shop that sponsored them till they graduated. They then got out with a guarantee of a C rate tech position at $18.75/hr flat rate with a basic set of tools. About 1 in 25 stayed and actually became decent techs, most bailed out after their first 6 months. Usually one good hot summer in a shop weeded out those who weren't going to make it. I saw it as buying a job for $15k that paid you less than you would make after expenses than the local fast food joint.
Snap-on dealers come and go pretty regularly, none seem to last more than a few years. The days of the life long Snap-on dealer seem to be gone. We haven't seen a Mac guy around here in at least 25 years, Cornwall gave it a shot for a while but those trucks have been gone for about 20 years, There was a few SK trucks, but they were pretty much short lived ventures. There's one Matco dealer that's been around now for about 15-20 years or so now, but Matco isn't the same as Snap-on. Each brand has their niche, for Matco it always seemed to be a short list of specialty hand tools, and cheaper tool boxes.
I'd have liked to have bought a Macsimizer three bank set back in the day but there were no dealers. My last box was a Snap-on KRL1004 with a twin top hutches and an SS top. It wasn't big enough. It cost $24k new in 2003 and was barely big enough then. Now that I'm retired I'd love to sell it. Its been sitting covered up in my garage since 2004 after the the shop I was working at didn't allow larger boxes.
I'd let it go for $8k if anyone wanted it for cash, or I'd consider trading it for a pair of smaller boxes that take up less space in a garage.
A top/bottom KRL1001/1201 like the OP mentioned would be the perfect downsizing trade.
I'm far from ready to sell my tools but being retired from wrenching means I don't need the massive security that a big box gives.
Hearing stories about older guys ending up with nothing in some senior home like the OP's neighbor makes me glad I don't have kids.
I've watched it happen over and over again around here. Kids go to school, get a high paid job far away, then suddenly worrying about an elderly parent back home and they push their way in and force the parent to either move or go into some miserable assisted living center.
In some cases it may be the right answer but for me, I'd go crazy without my tools, a welder or two, and my boat.
I am seeing more and more guys starting to 'fail' at a lot younger ages than those that came before. More and more guys are in 'bad' shape in their 50's. Alzheimer's, Dementia, and Parkinson's seems to be more and more prevalent lately for some reason. I've got buddies who are in homes now for 10 years with major issues since their late 50's, many have passed. More than half the guys I worked with in the late 90's are gone now, most not even making it to retirement age. Yet I know many older guys still going strong into their late 80's.
I'm glad I'm not the only one that sees this.Anybody that gets into automotive repair nowadays is NUTS, STUPID or both. If you're smart enough to repair a modern car you're smart enough to do something else that will not destroy your body and pay you peanuts. It's just a rotten deal all the way around compared to working in an air conditioned office. It's 114F in Phoenix today. Let's work our asses off, get greasy and dirty and get paid nothing in a non-air-conditioned shop. This ******** we see on the news every day is disgusting. Unemployment is at an all-time low and everybody's hiring. Yea, for **** jobs that pay nothing and you have to drive 50 miles each way to get to with gas being $6 a gallon. Whoopi **** what a deal!
If you don't do auction sales your items fall down on the list and don't get seen. Buy it Now items renew every 30 days, after the first day they're 20 pages down on the list. At least if you do a few auction sales, it gives buyers the chance to click on "Seller's other items".I haven't placed a bid on eBay in YEARS. That's probably why it didn't sell. Nobody wants to mess around.
Figure out the price you need, add modest or better yet free shipping, make it a Buy It Now and put it in the post immediately once it's bought.
Stuff will move. She's just doing it wrong.
Everything I buy I seek out specifically, buy it, and expect it to arrive in under a week. I don't play around.If you don't do auction sales your items fall down on the list and don't get seen. Buy it Now items renew every 30 days, after the first day they're 20 pages down on the list. At least if you do a few auction sales, it gives buyers the chance to click on "Seller's other items".
If there's something I want, I bid or buy it depending on how its listed. I don't much care either way. Most of the BIN prices I see tend to be on the high side. Free shipping means nothing, its never FREE shipping unless the seller is an idiot. I certainly wouldn't expect to by a 40lb set of wrenches and have them shipped for free for a low purchase price.
I adjust my search to look for the lowest price + shipping. I find that many items I see by hitting 'Other items by this seller' didn't show up under the initial search for some reason. I've bought a lot of items this way that apparently weren't turning up in anyone's search.
I say the same thing. I see far more SAE sizes than metric sizes. If all my box had was metric wrenches I'd be in big trouble when it comes to the hundreds of old tractors, RV's old boat motors, trailers, and heavy equipment I deal with.SAE dead? Anyone who thinks that lives a truly sheltered life. They pay no attention to the thousands of trucks, trailers, busses, RVs, boats, construction equipment, locomotives and railroad equipment, manufacturing facilities, machine shops, mines, factories and who knows what else that use SAE every day. There is a big huge wide world of industry out there not found under the hood of a Camry.
13 piece Snap-on SAE wrench sets for $99? Line em up I’ll buy all you got.
Looks like a FU situation... So out of interest, how much lets say a Toyota dealer charges customers for labour /hr ?I'm glad I'm not the only one that sees this.
There's a private shop that just opened up a couple years ago about a block from me out on the main highway. The guy bought a prime piece of real estate along a heavily traveled road and built the cheapest shop he could. Its a dark green un-insulated metal pole building with 6 garage bays and a 12x30 office and waiting room area. He put up a sign saying they service all makes and models. The owner was an electrician who tinkered with his hot rods on the side. He put ads in all the local free papers, CL and FB for A, B, and C rate techs, "Must have own tools". No benefits, techs have to buy and wash their uniforms, and the place doesn't have so much as a ceiling fan. The heat in the winter is one of those huge oil burning torpedo heaters.
I ran into him last week and he said he can't find guys who want to work. Hes paying $13, $15, and $17/hr for what he calls Experienced techs. He has a few guys in there that can maybe change oil but not much more. The place is a sweltering hot shithole. The owner is a screaming lunatic who rants and raves when something doesn't get fixed right by the Jiffy lube rejects he hires. 90% of all diag work is done by a roving service that goes shop to shop scanning cars for codes and handing the shop a 'recommendation list' of possible fixes. They charge customers $400 for that service. They sell tires, all offbrand tires from China. The tires are cheap but he charges $45 each to install and another $30 to dispose of the old ones, which in most cases he sells to a guy who does used tires at the fleamarket. His sign says $45/hr though, which gets him tons of work from unsuspecting car owners. What they don't realize is that it takes him 40 hours to do what a real tech could do in two or three. He's got a lot full of cars that never got picked up after customers couldn't or wouldn't pay.
All of this while the owner sits and watches horse racing on his TV in his air conditioned office.
All while trying to figure out why no one wants to work there.
Job wise around here its slim, there are thousands of low paying retail and restaurant type jobs, but nothing that pays more than $15-$17/hr. With how high the taxes are here , the cost of living these days, $17/hr doesn't cover your basic living expenses. a few local dealers have ads looking for techs but they top out at $15.50 these days. Less for body shop help. All work is flat rate and they only cover 50% of benefits.
$30k in diagnostic equipment? What exactly would that entail?
The auto repair industry has consistently been 20+ years behind the times IME, clinging desperately to an outdated business model still trying to make it work. The bottom rung of techs still makes 90’s wages and most shop owners have not stayed current and frankly have no clue as to the investment in tools a top level tech has to make in order to just come through the door.If you want to program and update modules, all makes all models, you'll be paying at least that per year in subscriptions alone. No hardware, internet, laptops, or per vehicle charges. Just the cost for the sub.
IIRC Keith for new level auto said benz was 30k a year. By themselves.
I have the bargain setup to diagnose cars. Two basic scan tools, and a pico. I would estimate my lab scope accessories like leads, clamps, transducers, break outs, exceed $2000. I'm cheap, and have the cheapo setup. Only 5k or so in scan tools. To update both would cost 1800 a year, for the data to do so. I keep just one current to save money.
I don't think you could buy $30,000 worth of non-electronic tools and be able to fix what I see in a regular month. I would estimate I probably spend a few hundred dollars on consumables per year. Out of my pocket the shop is not supplying
And I might be wrong, but I see more service work being done by used car lots and the like instead of the consumer. I.e consumers will drive the vehicle until the cost to repair it exceeds what they can afford, so they’ll trade it off and the used car market will scoop them up, spend money to fix them and flip them.
Yeah. The general public would rather just get a different car than "waste money" repairing their current ride.
Cheaper than buying new tires, Amirite?
The costs are really eye opening to why there's a shortage of techs and why people are saying "It's going to get worse".
Back in the late 90's all of the certs, scan equipment(I think the tech2 was the latest and greatest at the time), GM training, service manuals was covered by the dealerships (small town) and there was a whole lot less technology/equipment to buy and keep current. Sadly, I've been out of the loop since the late 90's when the family owned Chevy/Olds dealership was destroyed by a tornado and the older ownership decided not to rebuild and opted to retire.
Doesn't sound like a very upscale neighborhood to me? I look up and down my street and all I see are BMW's, Mercedes Benzes and huge ******* SUV's. I bring my 911 out of storage once every blue moon and park in in my driveway so that the neighbors don't harass me about my 2021 Camry being an eyesore.I say the same thing. I see far more SAE sizes than metric sizes. If all my box had was metric wrenches I'd be in big trouble when it comes to the hundreds of old tractors, RV's old boat motors, trailers, and heavy equipment I deal with.
I couldn't give a hoot about a Camry or any Toyota, Nissan, Subaru, or other import car. Much of the equipment in the fields here is old, well over 40 years old, some over 60 years old. The same with most boats and old trucks. As I look down my street, I think my 22 year old truck is the newest on the block.
I own both, you have to these days but we're decades away from not seeing anything that uses SAE sizes.