kams1973
ALLIANCE MEMBER
Is it true Snap-on Incorporated manufactured the original line of Kobalt tools?

Yes and NO. It is true that Williams Tools made the first generation of Lowes sold Kobalt tools in their Columbus, Georgia factory. It is also true that Williams is a part of Snap on empire. However, no Kobalt tool was ever made in the Snap on plant in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The brands may be related but, in this case, it's more than a stretch to imply that Kobalt tools were ever Snap on made. They're more like distant relatives than twins. I cringe every time I see a Williams, Kobalt, or Bahco listing with Snap on in the title.
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JH Williams is or was at the time a North American subsidiary of Bhaco who is or was a subsidiary of Snap-On. Basically Williams was a subsidiary of a subsidiary of Snap-On. remember that thread from last week where the former snap on engineer emailed the idiot writing about tool origin(he was all over the place with who made what). He said the original kobalt line was made in the same dies by the same people it was just a different quality of steel and heat treating.
remember that thread from last week where the former snap on engineer emailed the idiot writing about tool origin(he was all over the place with who made what). He said the original kobalt line was made in the same dies by the same people it was just a different quality of steel and heat treating.
remember that thread from last week where the former snap on engineer emailed the idiot writing about tool origin(he was all over the place with who made what). He said the original kobalt line was made in the same dies by the same people it was just a different quality of steel and heat treating.
remember that thread from last week where the former snap on engineer emailed the idiot writing about tool origin(he was all over the place with who made what). He said the original kobalt line was made in the same dies by the same people it was just a different quality of steel and heat treating.

If the thread exists, anyone know where it is![]()
...where the former snap on engineer emailed the idiot writing about tool origin...He said the original kobalt line was made in the same dies by the same people it was just a different quality of steel and heat treating.
...So their might be a wee bit of truth to what he was saying. More accurately being that Williams was making the Kobalt sockets on the same dies and tooling that they were used in making the Snap-On sockets for SO.
Yeah, it's here.
I remember first reading that post somewhere ~2002.
Part of the reason that it's so disjointed is that the OP isn't really the "author" but rather an "editor"; he was just trying to assemble a collection of posts by various others and that is why some of the info is good and some is just plain wrong. (For instance, the claim that Stanley produced most of the Craftsman line prior to 1994 is simply not true!)
Another reason it's so hard to follow is that the posts were taken from ancient tool forums that were hard to read in the first place!
There were several other similar/follow-up posts on the subject:
More on Who Makes What Tools
Kobalt Tools
But please note that Dan Peronto actually says nothing of the sort. The only claim he makes is that the Kobalt tools were made by the same people! He states clearly that "the manufacturing tooling is different"...
When I bought my set of snap-on tools (new and in factory packaging) there was a Kobalt socket in my 1/2" drive metric socket set. Dealer didn't bat an eye and swapped it out for a Snap-on piece.
I've heard this story repeated one too many times on the internet by now to actually believe it. So tell us, when exactly did this happen?
I'm curious...the more you hear it, the less you believe it?
That's interesting...
Happened in 1997.
Well, since Lowes introduced Kobalt in late 1998, I'm now even less inclined to believe it!
I'm curious...the more you hear it, the less you believe it?
That's interesting...
Happened in 1997.

Yes and NO. It is true that Williams Tools made the first generation of Lowes sold Kobalt tools in their Columbus, Georgia factory. It is also true that Williams is a part of Snap on empire. However, no Kobalt tool was ever made in the Snap on plant in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The brands may be related but, in this case, it's more than a stretch to imply that Kobalt tools were ever Snap on made. They're more like distant relatives than twins. I cringe every time I see a Williams, Kobalt, or Bahco listing with Snap on in the title.
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Having grown up in Columbus, I recall when SK built that plant. SK later sold the plant to Williams. I used to know a guy who was a plant engineer there and he told me that someone (not him) designed a ratchet for the Kobalt line, that was defective in design, and easily broke under load tests. Williams sent the design overseas and had it produced as a Kobalt ratchet. He said there was a lot of infighting over that one, but someone high up won out and the defective design got produced anyhow. He took early retirement when they closed the plant.
Charles
I don't recall ever seeing a Kobalt Ratchet from those Williams days that wasn't stamped USA on it. What other country overseas produced this ratchet?But the Kobalt brand was around before Lowes started selling it. I believe Kobalt was a sub-brand offered by Williams before Lowes started carrying it in 1998 or so...
Forgive me for being different than the herd and for being able to actually think and apply years of experience to my thought process.![]()
So basically you are calling me a liar...you have never met me, wouldn't know me if I walked up to you, but you have no problem calling me a liar? WTF, indeed!
What have I got to gain by going on the internet and telling this story? I contributed to the thread and you call me a liar. Your "years of experience" obviously haven't had much impact on your thought processes, except to have made them negative.
I stay far away from downer jackasses like you!
Tell us then, how do you suppose that one Kobalt branded socket made it's way into a set of Snap-On sockets in 1997 when in fact Snap-On didn't make Kobalt?? Give us your theory.
I have no idea...the distributor said that they came out of the same plant...the forging/chrome on the Kobalt did look very similar.
Again, I don't know how it happened, but it did. It was obviously a freak occurance, which is why I choose to share it here.