What would be a realistic price on a SnapOn cart that has an MSRP of $2700?
So, why doesn't the owner provide basic tools for the rookie coming onboard? It's a minuscule investment and shows commitment on their part.
Thanks. I'm already picturing a HF tool cart loaded with HF tools at the head of a bay waiting for some new talent to come along. Give them a key and make them responsible for it. Even if you lost some it would be worth the investment IMO. Give a realistic time frame on when you expect them to have their own basic tools and then this goes to the next new guy/gal.
A few do but it's not common. I've worked in two that had a no tools in no tools out and that was nice. It did kind of **** every once in a while when they didn't have the tool and you had to make do. Most shops provide something but I've seen some that provide nothing at all. Often what they do provide has to be shared and it's not in the best shape.
In manufacturing and industrial we do have shops conforming with ISO and 5S that provide all the tools because they are constantly calibrated and checked. Likewise the mechanics will get a small go bag. But it’s usually just the bare bones and just enough to squeak by. The most intelligent thing I could think of was for the company to provide a one time tool allowance under a certain amount but turnover is so high that it would be a total waste.So, why doesn't the owner provide basic tools for the rookie coming onboard? It's a minuscule investment and shows commitment on their part.
Scott, are they ALL goobers walking through the door? No ray of sunshine? lol
I like you work to own plan unless they get picky about the tools they may own...
In manufacturing and industrial we do have shops conforming with ISO and 5S that provide all the tools because they are constantly calibrated and checked. Likewise the mechanics will get a small go bag. But it’s usually just the bare bones and just enough to squeak by. The most intelligent thing I could think of was for the company to provide a one time tool allowance under a certain amount but turnover is so high that it would be a total waste.
Give them a set to start, don't inventory it, after 90 days it's theirs and if they loose something it's on them to replace.Because they're buying a Benz, and paying for their kids college, and going to a resort in a Caribbean with the office staff.. I've had vice grips as a door handle to the front lobby for several months. GP% is plenty high, shop $$$ revenue is plenty high. But somebodies bonus goes down when expenses go up, thus, poverty mentality. Nickle and dime, broken equipment, foundation leaks, doesn't matter. But shop supplies are $30 on your brake job, but I paid for all the consumables. LOL
The other reason is it's another thing to oversee. And the last thing management wants to do is waste any more time 'tard wrangling with the idiots dumping oil. When ******* loses half the sockets, how are you buying new ones? No you cannot deduct their pay, that's not legal. How often are you inventorying this? How are you getting replacements, due to loss, theft, or warranty failure? Are you paying them on the clock to drive to HF? Just reordering with a shop-supplies PO from advance auto? When they lost the T30 bit, and it's an OMG WAITER oil change, what is your process to remove the undertray?
I put together a tool-kit, including a HF cart, as a proposal for my employer. The ONLY reason the lube bay exists is to say "YES!!!!!" to anything and everything to get it in the door. Between lost time due to comebacks, damage claims, and just the toxic attitudes and stupidity, it's a loser as a business model. I don't know why we bother. By the time the job is done correctly, in the aftermarket shops I've worked in anyways, you're losing money because you needed someone with a brain to stop doing what they're doing to bring in revenue and fix goobers nonsense.
Your plan also assumes infinite growth to turn over the tools. Do you fire them when they don't have their own tools in X days? My plan included becoming "vested" over the course of a year, in which case they own the tools after 1 year. Leave the shop/industry? The tools are yours to take if you lasted the required period. At the time I believe it was about $750 including the cart, less tax. Deemed FAR too expensive. I don't loan tools, so I don't really care. Ever watch someone try to remove a cartidge oil filter housing with their hands? Oh well.
I always thought they were 0% interest but I'm seeing more and more posts like this... I just don't get it, fricken walk to Harbor Freight and buy ICON stuff, like I just don't get paying these prices and not being able to afford it so financing it at any non ultra low interest rate.
Truck account is 0% and a handshake. A credit account, with paperwork, is subject to interest.
I will finance when it makes sense. Save $1000 for financing it, instant rebate, and 60days same as cash. Divide the total by 8 weeks, there's your payment - take their $1000 and pay no interest. Just like buying a washing machine. Or just lump sum it the week after the paperwork files. If they will give me no penalty money for signing their financing docs and paying the $80 state fee I will take it.
I'd recommend new people walking into HF has well, or one of the numerous quality online brands.
In the OP that's a bill for $5400. If you can't pay that in 6 months you should not be buying it. Really if you don't have that as a lump sum of cash, regardless of payment structure, you shouldn't be buying it. 156 weekly payments of $50, 39 months at $200, 3.25 years. Seems like a bad call to me. I once paid about $600 in interest on a box. Paid it off in a few months. I justified it and lived to tell the tale. I doubt the person in the OP will be so lucky.
It's like a windowless van with candy inside.So a guy showing up for maybe an hour once a week; outside the shop in a truck; that they willingly go out to and get on is predatory?
You cant **** the willing. Its no different than big engine sports cars or big bro dozer diesel trucks. 150 years ago it was the same with large fancy thoroughbred horses. Young men(and women with different items) have always bought things that they in many cases could ill afford to impress their friends and strangers as well. Not much different than a peacock strutting around
Less than half the price of Snap-OnIcon tools are not cheap.
It's likely a new tech does not have thousands of dollars (verses ten of thousands) in hand just to get started.
Maybe cash for the PP tools - maybe.
You are right on the money. Good write-up.Well, we live in capitalism where the profit determines a lot. The companies are doing it because they can - also because there is always some person who "has to have the best and show it to others today and not tomorrow..."
In general people in USA (and probably many other countries) do not get any USEFUL financial education for everyday life in schools and colleges. It is much easier to control the uneducated population. Common sence is not that common in financial world either.
You want to control the public - pay them in colored pieces of paper and determine how much those pieces are worth. Let them save for their retirement in another pieces of paper/value tokens which have no direct correlation to real physical entities, control the value of those tockens and you control how much and how long people work. Just do not forget to brainwash the public periodically about "economy hard times, problems which are out of our control, etc...." Majority of public is in a way enslaved economically... Also do not forget to increase the ratio of managers who have power over people who actually produce/create/do something, pay them more and make them in charge of people who work...
There is no good way to fix the situation we are in where banks and corporations control and manipulate people. It's not only tool box companies, it's multiple others.
The only way to go around it would be the following
1. Start teaching people about finances properly in schools and colleges (I bet this would never happen - do not give freedom to people you want to control...)
Teach kids that financial success is actually a long term game of freedom and not showing off to your neighbor that you are driving a fancy $70,000 truck to a grocery store and paying tons of money for it, but rather ability to spend more time with the family, retire early, etc...
2. Older guys who teach younger ones should actually teach them properly (and not make them repeat the same mistake of making others rich by borrowing for the basics. "Having Snap On shows that you are serious about what you do and will help you find a better job type of BS (I bet a lot of those guys were either in debt themselves or are getting a % of sales...)
May be if some of those poor guys getting in debt for fancy tool boxes were told to "Get used and cheap, make money and then buy if you need", they would be better off
3. The MOST IMPORTANT WAY - Patents and grandparents trying to teach their kids (the world makes sure everybody works very hard, is too tired to get home to have too much meaningful interactions with kids. Remember - our goal is to raise them properly, not to help pay for their colleges...)
...I can keep going but you got the point
How does it go? “Neither a borrower or a lender be?”I don't work for a bank, and I'm surely no loan officer, but I get pretty sick of the term "predatory lending."
If you're an adult, and you've got a high school diploma or GED, you should be smart enough to understand how payments and interest works. It's a pretty basic math principle, that was likely taught to you for at least four years during your education. My 13yr old nephew gets it
If you're willing to sign on the dotted line over a several thousand dollar loan, you're capable of understanding the consequences. Whether it's 0.9% or 29.99% I don't care, you made the decision to sign because you wanted it THAT BADLY.
And that's the real problem.
People don't understand delayed gratification, saving for a goal, priorities, etc. Heck, even eBay has a "four easy payments" option...
Comparing the financial situations of struggling people today, with that of a 13 old boy? It's exactly the same.I don't work for a bank, and I'm surely no loan officer, but I get pretty sick of the term "predatory lending."
If you're an adult, and you've got a high school diploma or GED, you should be smart enough to understand how payments and interest works. It's a pretty basic math principle, that was likely taught to you for at least four years during your education. My 13yr old nephew gets it
If you're willing to sign on the dotted line over a several thousand dollar loan, you're capable of understanding the consequences. Whether it's 0.9% or 29.99% I don't care, you made the decision to sign because you wanted it THAT BADLY.
And that's the real problem.
People don't understand delayed gratification, saving for a goal, priorities, etc. Heck, even eBay has a "four easy payments" option...

I don't work for a bank, and I'm surely no loan officer, but I get pretty sick of the term "predatory lending."
If you're an adult, and you've got a high school diploma or GED, you should be smart enough to understand how payments and interest works. It's a pretty basic math principle, that was likely taught to you for at least four years during your education. My 13yr old nephew gets it
If you're willing to sign on the dotted line over a several thousand dollar loan, you're capable of understanding the consequences. Whether it's 0.9% or 29.99% I don't care, you made the decision to sign because you wanted it THAT BADLY.
And that's the real problem.
People don't understand delayed gratification, saving for a goal, priorities, etc. Heck, even eBay has a "four easy payments" option...
Comparing the financial situations of struggling people today, with that of a 13 old boy? It's exactly the same.
Seems like the problem isn't so much as a 30% interest rate, as it is a tool box costs $6000![]()
Lol... yupTekton, harbor freight, amazon.... I mention all deals, HJE day I'll pay for your shipping added to my order. Just tell me the tools you want and I'll order them.
Nope, never any takers. Then people want to borrow a 17mm socket.
"Pay mcwages" lmao so true and yet someone commented on another thread that they thought dealerships might be hurtingPay Mcwages, but expect them to bring $1000+ in tools to start on the first day. **** has TPMS now, digital is required. You need triple square for VW undertrays, you really need an impact driver for all of it. Just to have the absolute bare minimum and suffer working off a pile on the floor, you need $500.
Typical "skilled trade shortage" stuff.
Vise grips as a door handle ...you should see our bathroom , looks like crackhead lives in there , smells tooBecause they're buying a Benz, and paying for their kids college, and going to a resort in a Caribbean with the office staff.. I've had vice grips as a door handle to the front lobby for several months. GP% is plenty high, shop $$$ revenue is plenty high. But somebodies bonus goes down when expenses go up, thus, poverty mentality. Nickle and dime, broken equipment, foundation leaks, doesn't matter. But shop supplies are $30 on your brake job, but I paid for all the consumables. LOL
The other reason is it's another thing to oversee. And the last thing management wants to do is waste any more time 'tard wrangling with the idiots dumping oil. When ******* loses half the sockets, how are you buying new ones? No you cannot deduct their pay, that's not legal. How often are you inventorying this? How are you getting replacements, due to loss, theft, or warranty failure? Are you paying them on the clock to drive to HF? Just reordering with a shop-supplies PO from advance auto? When they lost the T30 bit, and it's an OMG WAITER oil change, what is your process to remove the undertray?
I put together a tool-kit, including a HF cart, as a proposal for my employer. The ONLY reason the lube bay exists is to say "YES!!!!!" to anything and everything to get it in the door. Between lost time due to comebacks, damage claims, and just the toxic attitudes and stupidity, it's a loser as a business model. I don't know why we bother. By the time the job is done correctly, in the aftermarket shops I've worked in anyways, you're losing money because you needed someone with a brain to stop doing what they're doing to bring in revenue and fix goobers nonsense.
Your plan also assumes infinite growth to turn over the tools. Do you fire them when they don't have their own tools in X days? My plan included becoming "vested" over the course of a year, in which case they own the tools after 1 year. Leave the shop/industry? The tools are yours to take if you lasted the required period. At the time I believe it was about $750 including the cart, less tax. Deemed FAR too expensive. I don't loan tools, so I don't really care. Ever watch someone try to remove a cartidge oil filter housing with their hands? Oh well.
Lol... yup
H.J.E...??
Vise grips as a door handle ...you should see our bathroom , looks like crackhead lives in there , smells too
But sales dept , you could eat off the floor in there , comfy with a.c and looks and smells good
Yeah, it's 156 weekly payments not monthly payments. That's a 24.9% APR 3 year loanThe invoice that you show in post #1 doesn't add up.
$5440 financed for 13 years at 24.9% is 156 payments of $118 each ($18,350 total).
156 payments of $49.57 is 5.75% interest on $5440 financed.
weekly payments.The invoice that you show in post #1 doesn't add up.
$5440 financed for 13 years at 24.9% is 156 payments of $118 each ($18,350 total).
156 payments of $49.57 is 5.75% interest on $5440 financed.
Not comparing struggles of today's adultComparing the financial situations of struggling people today, with that of a 13 old boy? It's exactly the same.
Seems like the problem isn't so much as a 30% interest rate, as it is a tool box costs $6000![]()
While I agree that it was his choice and final decision I think any financing over 20% is predatory, needs to be outlawed... especially with $40 late fees... if there credit is that bad you shouldn't be financing them at all.The SO truck doesn't prey, people are just dumb. The interest rate reflects the risk of unsecured loans on high priced items.
I don’t hate the trucks I just buy very little from them because most everything can be obtained elsewhere for a far better price. We live in a good time for affordable tools that aren’t junk.
1. You would be surprised, a 13yo fresh out of stats class yes, but adults noNot comparing struggles of today's adult
to the struggles of a 13yr old boy.
You missed the point.
My point was that a 13yr old, public school attending, B-/C+ student is able to figure out how a loan works, what interest costs, and what the total cost will be. At age 13 he can spot a bad deal.
If a 13yr old can do it, an adult has no reason to cry "predatory lending" when they sign up for a loan and end up in trouble.
It's not difficult math.
And you can buy a perfectly adequate tool box for under $1000 if you're starting out. A US General 56 is what, $750 on sale?