I'm not going to argue with you as anything I say you really want to pick apart and act superior.
Here's from a youtube channel jeffs garage adventures Snap On vs ICON pliers comparison:
If you're well versed in the business world, you'll explain how ICON isn't a direct copy of the Snap On Version. The point I'm making is that the ICON marketing plan is to be cheap Snap On.
First off.
“Not This Sh!t Again”.
Secondly, yes, Harbor Freight tries to make their tools look like Snap-On.
This is hardly unique in the business world.
Crocs literally makes shoes that look like other brands such as the “Yeezy”.
The original Crocs design was essentially a plastic clog that looked like a copy of a Birkenstock design, but with drainage holes and the flip strap added. (And Patented), but Birkenstock may not have even originated the plastic clog idea.
The Crocs brand has really good attorneys, or friends in high places.
The same is true of car brands for numerous designs.
As far the Snap-On “design” goes, the red foam grips are not unique to Snap-On.
Klein used to sell red foam rubber replacement grips that looked the same.
Crescent used to sell pliers with red foam rubber grips, although I hated the material used.
Proto uses red grips, although the grips are smooth, etc.
The Snap-On needle nose design goes back decades to a Vacuum Grip (a plier brand that Snap-On bought out), however, the Vacuum grip needle/chain nose plier design seems to have possibly been copied from the needle nose design from the Bernard Scollhorn Manufactured pliers.
It could well be older than that company though as well.
The only difference is the wider flat plier legs were the two pieces cross each other, but that is practical plier design, and hardly limited to Snap-On.
The slip Joint pliers are basically copies of numerous other slip joint pliers, except the three pivot holes, out of alignment.
The basic design of these pliers doesn’t even originate with Snap-On, their older slop joint pliers were different, and copied a design going back to at least the mid 1800s.
I don’t know who originated this basic design.
Multi hole slip joint pliers are also not Patentable, and haven’t been for decades.
The out of slignment holes were Oatented by Snap-On, but by manufacturing their own, Icon effectively challenged the Snap-On Oatent, and Snap-On didn’t file a lawsuit, either meaning it wasn’t worth the legal costs, or Snap-On had reason to believe HF could get the Patent annulled.
The wirecutters are wire cutters, I have no clue why these would even be considered an “exclusive” Snap-On design.
Snap-On could make exclusive grips and file a design patent, which is what they have done in the past and why they likely switched from the hard handle design people liked to the current design.
That would protect them for I think 17 years.
They haven’t bothered so far.