I'm curious what company people think tends to be one of the biggest innovators in tools? .
Snap On is the obvious choice here. They invented the modern socket set almost 100 years ago, but somehow managed to keep on inventing. That's about spending money on engineering, R&D, and market research. The other US tool companies didn't really do that. SK invented the round head ratchet, then never really invented anything else.
But while Snap On has been inventive, they have also purchased many smaller companies that invented stuff they liked. Sun produced the vehicle diagnostic systems. Snap On bought Sun and has done right by them. Same as CDI, Williams, Bahco etc.
Snap On is a corporate success story on a level beyond just about everybody else. But there are smaller companies out there innovating and making big impacts on the industry. Gearwrench invented the modern ratcheting box wrench. That revolutionized ratchet wrenches and maybe ratchet handles as well. Saw Stop invented the first table saw with an effective meat sensing brake. Hasn't consumed the industry yet, but it hopefully will. I think Koken is a company to watch for innovation. I think they are rethinking the socket, how it works...etc
The area I'd like to see more innovation is in tool storage. I'd like to see someone like Tekton get more involved. We haven't really reconsidered tool boxes or tool storage. The Germans' mini roll carts like the Assistant appear to have been designed for floor based workmen, working on cars on jack stands. They appear to be designed to be accessed from the ground. They were optimized for the fewer number of tools used in the past and for limited space. The few number of tools aside, these features seem to be better suited to most home shop mechanics, but that's not what I see in their garages.
The modern Snap On roll cabs seem to be designed for standing workers using a lift. Their larger footprints make sense for moving them around larger shops. While I'd love to have a new Snap On roll cab, I feel I'd probably be better served by something designed for ground based work. From a garage perspective, a Peli case makes more sense than a sheet metal box. They can be sealed from humidity, are more damage tolerant, lighter, probably stiffer, have multiple ways to move or handle them. Our military uses them and they make a lot of sense.
Socket, wrench, screwdriver storage isn't great either. I've tried most methods and I'm not deliriously happy with any of them. Like to see more innovation surrounding tool storage and access. I'd like better labeling to show sizes, ways to remove whole sets, ways to reconfigure sets for specific vehicles...etc.