The world is fill of English lit types,,, its part of the problem we got now. I got to love the reasoning,,, you cant do practical math and its because I don't follow proper grammer... says it all in a nutshell right there.
Here is part of the overall point though and its for those in business and want, need or should be economical. If yo are on the fence about deciding to buy something you need go to Walmart and get it. Do not read 100's of posts to which I am a counterweight to sit around scratching till you can afford or need to use credit to get a tool.
You think I don't make sense,,, anyone that tries to explain SnapOn as a "value: is full of it. Your perception may differ which is what really happens but it depreciates so fast the day you buy that it takes years before there is any ROI just to break even.
I got a few pieces, they are nice and it didn't break me, bought out of pocket but took one loss to figure out how painful that was and when I buy a single off the rack a while back from Lowes, full polish for some affordable price even my helper had to comment,,, new wrench and asked how much,, retail 4$.
I got nothing against spending anything you want, good for the vendors but to try to leave a blanket persistant impression that it makes some kind of financial sense and turns the limp wristed in to golden arms is absolutely false,,,, its about like going to the casino to win money.
Is it really worth the cost and the worry,,, zillions of China end wrenches now in the world and a handful of problems, the forum is non stop about warranty worry over the best tools?
The weak link in all of it is the user. Manpower makes hundreds of mistakes for any issue caused by a faulty hand tool. We tore a fairly complicated tractor apart yesterday morning, my Brother was my helper and first thing I had to hide a swivel and half the tools, get him to replace the tools he got he didn't need with less and correct so we didn't have to shuffle thru this job sifting.
There are a few places in life you need gadgets and specialty makes routine a lot easier but "upgradijng" from a set of Pittsburg or Cman wrenches for anyone working for a common wage is pointless and a mathematical loser, I will take 5 minutes out to figure my way around a stubborn problem before I start tossing 20's at it. If its a routine common issue then it makes sense to apply the effort there vs a "buckshot" approach.
I hate to see some kid told he is being robbed and wasting money if he doesn't buy some premium product cause of the warranty and a few other absolute nonsense arguments you can try to make for it.
The Chilton manual says it all. I must have missed that part.
Its my blog for the day, its fwiw, like it or not, own thoughts from someone that buys a dollar wrench, makes it pay the first time and a hundred after and refuses to buy a bottle of water for 2$ sold next to the drinking fountain.
Lots of you probably got more money than I do, this is not for you, I have my own economic faults but I can say this from lots of practical experience in tuff environment with nuts and bolts.
I got thousands of pieces, probably not worth 5 grand at a good sale, you could bring every piece they make in the biggest box they got (I got room) snd we have a little shootout about stuck, broke rusted, beat and about 1 out of 10 would beat me,,, and that's questionable as to as he was looking thru all that **** I would have vised gripped it out on the first try.