My point is buy them. If you aint got them need them and way good enough if you can get past the cheap price. On all the lists you made that is a tool every serious mechanic would have in the mix.
I have 2 due to the fact there is one in my truck tools and one for the shop.
I got a lot of **** cause I am a shop but the stuff I need to take care of my stuff and make a living is really rather minimal. When I lived out in the world had everything I needed to do most anything fir in the trunk of a good sized car for the most part. I can get to most of the things I got to do with my road kit, the rest of it just makes it a little faster where repetition is time and money and we are charging or paying others to do it.
I drove old cars, still do a lot. If it was running good I didn't fuk with it, if the brake was making any kind of noise I looked at it sooner than later, paid for an oil change and a local shop with a hoist to repair a Ujoint, a muffler hanger and changes out a tire here and there as I found a better one. If it needed a brake pad its what it got. I didn't pack wheel bearings, didn't change rotor or drum unless I had to and got absolutely8 nothing against a pad swap it it makes it serviceable and certainly beats driving it around broke cause you cant afford 500 in parts to use "the best" at every turn.
I had a little air comp so I could do a tire, a box of tools or 2 I could carry, a drill and a couple saws. I didn't even have electric impact unless I was working, didn't do any more work to the stuff than I had to. A way to jack the wheel up.
If I was doing real work would rig up what and when I had to, a handful of tools to do a roof, a piece of rental equipment on occasion. You can carry most of the tools needed to wire a house in a 5 gallon bucket.
Sometimes its easier to wrench off a couple bolts than to go get the perfect tool, buy and take care of it so its easier to wrench off a couple bolts on occasion and so on. Not every mechanic fully understands extension length and possible combinations between socket length. I can seem to get a common tool on where others need 3 adapters. Same for the common combo wrench. Yes I got a few Snapons but the ones I use are simple decent ones in 12 pt of any brand and a few have different little features I can grab up if needed. A collection of some in offsets and DBE fill in. Not every piece needs to be great, I got most of it in Cman and some imports junk that has endured.
I wouldn't need it all to keep the family truckster moving.
Most or better trade work often requires the tools a guy can carry on a belt that's not provided. With installers its often similar, sign installer and electrician very similar.