methomas70
Well-known member
I was just reading post #261 in the "The Orange Snap-on tools **** thread!" showing a sweet pair of orange-handled door clip tools, and it got me to thinking.
As I write this, I'm waiting for a part from the Toyota dealer, a door latch cable for my Tundra.
Yesterday, while disassembling the door panel, I used my Tool-Aid brand 87810 upholstery clip removal tool. I bought it maybe 7 years ago at an auto parts store (Napa most likely). I didn't keep the receipt for it, I'd guess I spent 7 or 8 bucks on it. But I did keep the package it came in. Made in (you guessed it) China, and nowhere is there mention of a warranty. (the Sears website sells this and Sears claims it has a lifetime warranty though). So far it has served me well.
So I looked up the Snappy tool on the Canadian site, (couldn't find it on US one) and A161BO lists for $35.50. I'm not sure if that converts to $8,000 or a nickel in American dollars.
The Tool-Aid tool isn't as well built as my Snap-on screwdrivers/pry bars; no doubt, "there is a difference". But I can't see the need for a clip tool to be 5 times the price. Oh sure, I guess if I worked in an upholstery, body or restoration shop and popped hundreds of thousands of clips, the cheaper tool's chrome might wear prematurely.
And no I'm not trolling the crowd. I have a bunch of SO stuff, its all been top-notch and money well spent. I'm just trying to make a valid point. There are tools that many of us agree should NOT be made by the lowest bidder. Am I going to run out and buy a TOOL-AID set of screwdrivers, combination wrenches, line wrenches, ratchets, air tools, jack stands, & torx sockets? HELL NO!
I think this one, in MY experience, CAN be skimped on.
Mitch
As I write this, I'm waiting for a part from the Toyota dealer, a door latch cable for my Tundra.
Yesterday, while disassembling the door panel, I used my Tool-Aid brand 87810 upholstery clip removal tool. I bought it maybe 7 years ago at an auto parts store (Napa most likely). I didn't keep the receipt for it, I'd guess I spent 7 or 8 bucks on it. But I did keep the package it came in. Made in (you guessed it) China, and nowhere is there mention of a warranty. (the Sears website sells this and Sears claims it has a lifetime warranty though). So far it has served me well.
So I looked up the Snappy tool on the Canadian site, (couldn't find it on US one) and A161BO lists for $35.50. I'm not sure if that converts to $8,000 or a nickel in American dollars.
The Tool-Aid tool isn't as well built as my Snap-on screwdrivers/pry bars; no doubt, "there is a difference". But I can't see the need for a clip tool to be 5 times the price. Oh sure, I guess if I worked in an upholstery, body or restoration shop and popped hundreds of thousands of clips, the cheaper tool's chrome might wear prematurely.
And no I'm not trolling the crowd. I have a bunch of SO stuff, its all been top-notch and money well spent. I'm just trying to make a valid point. There are tools that many of us agree should NOT be made by the lowest bidder. Am I going to run out and buy a TOOL-AID set of screwdrivers, combination wrenches, line wrenches, ratchets, air tools, jack stands, & torx sockets? HELL NO!
I think this one, in MY experience, CAN be skimped on.
Mitch

