But isn't it common for a tech with a very well equipped tool set to accidently have a tool break in the middle of the job with no appropriate spare or easy workaround? Or what if a tech needs a highly specialized tool that only one or two sr. techs happens to have on hand?
I don't see how non co-operation among professionals would result in a very positive work environment. (assuming their reputation is "professional" vs. "hack") .
They can buy the tool, or hand over the ticket to a professional will the required tools required to preform the job at hand. Pro environment? No sense lending nearly anything, under any circumstances. That's money that could've been mine, for completing said repair. That's a car being fixed with the tools I bought, adding wear to those tools, while I receive no compensation. So I now have additional wear/use on my tools, that I bought, and received zero pay. As I said, I will bail somebody out. But that is a less than once per-year occurrence. I prefer to make them struggle first and TRY to find a way around it. That's what I do, I have no one to borrow from.
My shop doesn't have a transmission jack. You want a fuel tank removed? Give me the job, or somebody else can drag it out on their back. No, I'm not helping. That's why I bought the jack with my own money, to drop fuel tanks. I'm not dropping a 25gallon fuel tank that's full onto 3 guys backs like a bunch of animals. If the shop wants shop tools and equipment, the shop can buy it. If my dollars are being spent, only I will reap the benefits.
I have a thread on here right now, where I'm considering buying a $3,000 CO2 leak detection setup out of my own pocket. You think anybody but me is going to be touching that? It might be one thing if another tech actually bought some tools and wanted to be in a trading arrangement. Like he buys all the VW injector pulling tools and I buy the BMW ones? Maybe. Still don't like that. Most of the borrowers are goobers who can't fill a harbor freight cart who want to use my investment to try to make a living. Nope, not gonna happen. Part of the reason I buy all of the tools I do, is to control workflow. If I'm the only person with tool X, the shop can either pay me to do the job, or tell the customer they can't do it. This gives me massive leverage, which is the whole point.
I'm the only guy with a scan tool to do electronic parking brakes. Guess what? ALL of those brake jobs, are now my brake jobs. This system has worked well for me. As I earn more, I buy more - it's a massive feedback loop.