2) The ratchet's selector *****, the paddle trigger ***** and I can smell the motor burning up during use. Not to mention the damn thing flex too much under torque.

I love Snap-on's 14.4v, the entire system is very well thought out. I prefer this system over Milwaukee's M12.
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A few things that I didn't like about the M12 system:
1) Rubber grips on the tools are harder to clean and the grips eventually bulges from exposure to solvents and oil.
2) The ratchet's selector *****, the paddle trigger ***** and I can smell the motor burning up during use. Not to mention the damn thing flex too much under torque.
3) Impact wrench only have one LED equipped.
4) The drill feels significantly bigger in my hands, in fact every M12 handle feels bigger than my Snap-ons.
https://scontent-lga.**.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xta1/v/t1.0-9/10408631_10201862695202674_4274824819971491429_n.jpg?oh=df7a06a4e14727795c1f9da58f40e64b&oe=55BCE634
You must be using the fuel products backwards.![]()

Not impressed with their 3/8 or 1/2 impacts, ha , find that very hard to believe (fuel series anyway). Maybe not as good as IR. but "not impressed " seems misleading at the very least when considering quality, run time and power.
just curious - whats the cost difference between the milwaukee and the comparable SO for tools and batteries? i know the SO is gonna be higher, just curious how much.
Errr, I paid no more than $200 more for my entire Snap-on kit. It is unfair to compare Snap-on's list price to other brands' when they're "on sale" (not MRSP). When you can buy Milwaukee anywhere it's a race to the bottom of the profit margin between retailers to make that sale.2-3x the price kit for kit. I have a lot of 14.4V and a couple 18V too I just find it hard to recommend. Warranty ***** (1YR). Both my 8810s have issues, 1 LED issue despite being nearly new (minor issue really but...retail is $600!), 1 reverse bias issue that I just mailed off. My CT661 was fine but the 761 that I replaced it with lasted mere MONTHS before the internals grenaded. Apparently its not an uncommon problem. Ratchet is holding up though but I will say its very weak, more of a time saver but you basically have to break fasteners free by hand first in every situation. My other issue is the battery tabs **** and its very hard to separate them from the tool. All this for a premium price? Eh.
If the Snap-On is cheapest, go for it but at list prices I'd strongly urge you to look at other brands first (IR, MAC, Milwaukee) based on my experiences. Cheaper prices, in most cases substantially cheaper, and better warranty for functionally identical tools. You have to be sipping the Koolaid pretty regularly to not recommend other brands.