Any thoughts or experience on a reasonable Tool Set for the average joe to keep in the trunk of the car? I'm sure there are other threads on this, but for this one I would like to not get into a ******* match over USA vs. Taiwan or this wrench vs that wrench that can withstand 9,000 lbs of torque lol. My brother asked me what set would be good for him. He's a college kid on his own and definitely not a mechanic, but he would like something for routine stuff on his car and around the apartment.
I have I have the 82 piece Duralast set which I really like and paid around $100 for, AND the 225 Pittsburgh set that I paid about $130 for. No wrenches in the Duralast but the Pittsburgh has a small assortment of them, plus the sockets are all Pittsburgh Pro which have really good reviews.
Anyways, I'm interested in your thoughts on a good-bang-for-the-buck set with perhaps even more thoughts on supplementing the set with a bag of extras for jobs up to maybe side-of-the-road jobs like alternator, starter, or water pump jobs.
I supplemented my sets with a bag of extra extensions, pliers (big and small channel locks, dikes, long and short needle nose, linesmans, crimpers, vice grips), long flex-head 1/4", 3/8", and 1/2" ratchets, tape (ductape and electrical), extra wrenches up to 1" and 19mm, flashlight, good mechanics gloves, torx and allen sockets, screwdrivers, and a 3/8 and 1/2 breaker bars.
Any other thoughts out there? I know Tekton, WorkPro, Craftsman, Stanley, Bostich, Prograde, etc. all have some budget sets out there but I'm interested in your thoughts and specifically WHY?
I have I have the 82 piece Duralast set which I really like and paid around $100 for, AND the 225 Pittsburgh set that I paid about $130 for. No wrenches in the Duralast but the Pittsburgh has a small assortment of them, plus the sockets are all Pittsburgh Pro which have really good reviews.
Anyways, I'm interested in your thoughts on a good-bang-for-the-buck set with perhaps even more thoughts on supplementing the set with a bag of extras for jobs up to maybe side-of-the-road jobs like alternator, starter, or water pump jobs.
I supplemented my sets with a bag of extra extensions, pliers (big and small channel locks, dikes, long and short needle nose, linesmans, crimpers, vice grips), long flex-head 1/4", 3/8", and 1/2" ratchets, tape (ductape and electrical), extra wrenches up to 1" and 19mm, flashlight, good mechanics gloves, torx and allen sockets, screwdrivers, and a 3/8 and 1/2 breaker bars.
Any other thoughts out there? I know Tekton, WorkPro, Craftsman, Stanley, Bostich, Prograde, etc. all have some budget sets out there but I'm interested in your thoughts and specifically WHY?