kelpaso1
MEMBER EMERITUS
99 here. And that's Canadian deneros.Wait, you made this decision AFTER you paid $164 for a 1/4in ratchet???
99 here. And that's Canadian deneros.Wait, you made this decision AFTER you paid $164 for a 1/4in ratchet???
I was really, really hoping somehow the actual snap on ones they make themselves were actually someone elses. I have the ubiquitous set everybody has:Similar, but not the same. However, I'd had these for at least 12 years so the design may have changed. They're all (6) reversible.
At the time Craftsman wanted $96 for the set. Mac or Matco was about $120 & Snappy wanted $198. Craftsman had them on sale for $32.
These are the ones I have:I was really, really hoping somehow the actual snap on ones they make themselves were actually someone elses. I have the ubiquitous set everybody has:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005MVB6TG/?tag=atomicindus08-20


My mother-in-law came from a dirt-poor farming family. The came-home-from-school-and-worked-until-bed kind of thing. The parents would send the kids into the woods to forage for food (berries, mushrooms, etc.). She's incredibly frugal and very smart. Everything is a calculation and it dominates her view, because she knows what it's like to be truly poor. It's allowed her to live relatively well on pretty limited money (lost her husband in the 80's). But honestly, she carries it to a degree where she's not having the fun/happiness she could. So I'm not advocating that.OK, lets add some gasoline to this fire:
Snap On makes some tools which make the life much easier doing certain jobs and it helps people who use them routinely. I think that majority of people could have survived without buying brand new Snap On things off the truck. Some of the purchases is just a wish to have good brand which people know and it has nothing to do with financially smart decision
If we all were frugal and thought
- majority would be driving old civics, carollas and mazda 3 cars
- people would be wearing casio $15 watches instead of fancy brands
- you would be wearing your T-shirts till they disintegrated on you
- you would not buy a dryer and would buy a drying rack
- ... you got my point - Mr Money Mustache has a whole blog about being financially smart - wish they taught a lot of these ideas in schools, but them people would be too independent and hard to control as economic slavery would not affect them as much
...Yes, I have some Snap On, MAC, Cornwell, etc
...No, majority were bought used, some restored, derusted, lubricated, etc
...DIY, not professional.
Those are the ones I have also but mine have blue handles and are branded "Imperial" who I believe are the OEM for all the like ones out there, i.e. S-K, K-D, Gearwrench, Snap-On (Blue Point?). Picked mine up off fleabay cheap since most don't know the Imperial brand.
ALL?? Countless Brits grew up with Britool just as the French did with Facom etc. Do Koken *offshore* their production from Japan to the US?I also like snap-on because it is a known quantity. I know what I’m getting when I pay their price for a tool. With all the foreign tool makers you never know if they decided to off shore said tool to increase profit since the last you tube review came out can we say gearwrench.
Christ FED you work in the FBI building. How many tool truck guys want to go into that place? They'll never come out. Most likely off to Guantanamo never to be seen again.
I'm not in the industry but don't the tool truck companies specifically go after people new to the industry with the student discounts and loans and whatnot?These guys mounting tires and changing oil are grossing $500 max/week, so $25k a year. Even if they're "well paid" at 15/hour that's like 31k/year gross. Most truck guys don't even want to do business with them...
While the frequency of such occurences are quite probably overstated they aren't a myth. I have a much younger friend that went to a school to be a heavy equipment mechanic and spent quite a bit of money on Snap On tools. I don't know exactly how much because he is not exactly detail oriented, but I can imagine that it was not insignificant even knowing the deals Snap On frequently gives to tech school students. Stayed at it for about a year and decided it wasn't for him. Sold the tools. Then he spent 6 or 7 years as a lineman for Georgia Power, and is now going back to being a heavy equipment tech. Where I am sure he will go into debt on the tool trucks again. He is under 30 and has filed bankruptcy once already. I foresee it happening again before long.I believe the myths of the 15k in truck debt luber goobers are just that.
This is an absolutely valid point though. I could get by with a whole lot less than I have. I have two track cars which I need like I need another hole in my head. But life isn't all about need as I am sure we all know well.I see this a LOT in these threads. It stops being about the tools, and starts being a seminar on economics and retirement planning. I'm not saying to fill a box with truck brands, or even all SK or Wright. But at a certain point one needs to realize buying more than the absolute bare minimum occurs in a lot of other industries outside tools. And if that's the conversation we want top have, which is worth having BTW, that needs to be understood as being a fundamentally different conversation.
I'm not in the industry but don't the tool truck companies specifically go after people new to the industry with the student discounts and loans and whatnot?
I worked with a guy at a dealer who came from Portugal and he said that all tools were provided for them.FWIW - it's pretty crappy that techs have to bring their tools with them to a job (in many of the jobs anyway). It perpetuates a system that puts a massive financial risk and burden on employees.
Sure they do! It's easy pickens.but don't the tool truck companies specifically go after people new to the industry with the student discounts and loans
I worked with a guy at a dealer who came from Portugal and he said that all tools were provided for them.
I also had to do some work at a Ford emission test facility in Allen Park, MI and the tech I was working with said all his tools were provided, Tall SO box , a lot of SO hand tools etc. Ford owned them but he could borrow them as needed for home work if needed.
With that in mind , should all carpenters, plumbers, HVAC have all their tools provided by the respective employer?
Theyd drop 1000 at harbor freight and never replenish anything ever again. LOL. Imagine waiting your turn for the 14mm wrench.I can relate totally what you said , the whole system is F-ed you can't in make a living with POS tools they would provide.
It was bad enough with the shop tools being broken, missing "borrowed",
I used to buy my own shop specialty tools so I didn't have to chase them down or fix them.
About ten years before I retired from my aircraft manufacturing job in the Seattle area my employer started to provide all the tools for its employees as way to prevent foreign object debris/damage. The tools provided were Snap-on across the entire enterprise. We were all provided toolkits that we were required to inventory twice a day. Some manufacturers do know that we have to build with quality and aircraft is one area that you can’t pull over to the side of the road at 35,000 feet.Tools supplied by the employer, in my personal experience, are the biggest pieces of **** you can possibly imagine. And the other trades you listed, again in my experience, are hourly. Try being a flat rate or commission employee and finding out your employer doesnt have an 11mm hex socket so you're paid $0/hour while you wait for then to find one or abandon the job.
As ASOG says regularly in their podcasts, the auto industry has subsidized repair costs of customers and business expenses for employers on the backs of their technicians. I might have more invested in tools than my employer, even if you include their lifts and alignment machine. It's at least competitive. Without their lifts included, I blow them out of the ******* water by a factor of 10. They cry like 5k for a new emissions machine is some relevant amount of money.
Interesting. Schools must work differently where you are then. I recall looking into it for a nephew who was considering becoming a automotive technician and the programs here were heavily focused towards on the job training. If I recall correctly its a 4 year apprenticeship with a minimum requirement of 10 months/year working under a certified mechanic + 2 months/year of classroom based training. I can't imagine tuition costs would be anywhere near $30k, probably under $10k which should hopefully get paid/subsidized by their employer.IMO, and some here will disagree with me, the biggest and most predatory waste of money is the trade school "educations". I'd rather a kid get a job as a lube tech and drop 30k on the tool trucks over 18 months than spend 30k on a tech school and leave not being able to rack a car or mount tires. That's a whole 'nother discussion.
Interesting. Schools must work differently where you are then. I recall looking into it for a nephew who was considering becoming a automotive technician and the programs here were heavily focused towards on the job training. If I recall correctly its a 4 year apprenticeship with a minimum requirement of 10 months/year working under a certified mechanic + 2 months/year of classroom based training. I can't imagine tuition costs would be anywhere near $30k, probably under $10k which should hopefully get paid/subsidized by their employer.
I just replaced wheel studs on my Deere backhoe, and it wasn't the worst job in the world. So if the studs wear out, have the kids replace them.The great white north seems to have a bit better reputation with their red-seal program. The local rosedale-tech had an instructor straight up tell me they don't have the kids rack cars if they can help it, too much risk of them dropping one. So..... they come into a shop and can't rack a car. They don't have them pulling wheels "because the studs would wear out". The vo-tech programs are even worse, they have the kids all mount a tire once. END OF TIRE INSTRUCTION. Well, employers need them mounting 5+ sets a day minimum. And they can't rack the car. Or use an impact gun, they can barely even hold the thing.
I've been quoted the 30k number by numerous people as the tuition/tooling cost of the 18month program. No employer is paying a cent of that LOL Maybe being in the ****** environment I am, I only see the losers. Perhaps the good ones end up going right to dealers. Like I said I work in well paying, but otherwise really ****** places. Roofs leaking, floors destroyed, racks puking fluid and dropping, etc. Of course, I meet plenty of 20+ year industry veterans who can't wield a test light to check for power and ground. Let alone comprehend voltage drop. Years back I did some diag/inspection work for a friend working at a used car lot. The "diagnostic" stuff I needed to sort out was horrifying. Car has plugs/wires/coil on it and still misfires. Well, 30psi of compression will do that. It's a front cylinder. It was 10minutes to diagnose that and punt it back to the auction; except it cost them paying me, and plugs/wires/coilpack plus the hourly wage of the 30+ year guy who made the original "diagnosis"
Aviation is a bit higher end then my world. We just pay kids 12/hour and call them hacks or lazy when they can't do the work with no tools or training. I guess that's what I try to stress with these long rambling paragraphs - it's the wild west out here. No rules, no regulations, no excuses. It's not hourly work so nobody up the chain gives two shits about equipment or service info or anything. It literally isn't their problem.
Schooling cost me $500 a level, but I also received a govt fuel stipend plus I used the same books for all 3 years, $600, but they weren't available on PDF when I bought em, catch my drift. That said I didn't attend a pre-apprenticeship program, which I believe covers all your levels of school and includes a work placement where most get hired afterwards for their apprenticeship. I'm in Diesel, but the fundamental structures are the same.Interesting. Schools must work differently where you are then. I recall looking into it for a nephew who was considering becoming a automotive technician and the programs here were heavily focused towards on the job training. If I recall correctly its a 4 year apprenticeship with a minimum requirement of 10 months/year working under a certified mechanic + 2 months/year of classroom based training. I can't imagine tuition costs would be anywhere near $30k, probably under $10k which should hopefully get paid/subsidized by their employer.
SK has rebuild kits for 70 year old ratchets....just sayingI like the few Nepro and Koken tools I have used but they are around the same price as snap-on and harder to get replacements. How many other brands stock a rebuild kit for a 15 year old ratchet?
Better buy'm nowSK has rebuild kits for 70 year old ratchets....just saying
You can buy a Williams ratchet for 30 bucks that uses the exact same internal components as Snap On. Your paying for the service. And there's nothing wrong with that. If the service is important enough to you to pay an extra 100 dollars for, then it is and you should pay it. I do question how it can be justified when you can just keep a spare ratchet around. But that's not to say it's not for someone. If it is, but it. If not, but the cheaper one, or two of them.Problem is I can buy a $40 ratchet that will likely outlive me too. So yea 4 times the cost for a tool that likely will do the same work? That is overpriced. I have multiple Snap On ratchets, and don't regret buying them, but I don't pretend it was a reasonable decision from a purely financial stand point.
Yes, but an outdated 36 tooth design versus the new dual 80's 80 tooth design. I'm not bashing as I own a fair bit of Williams wrenches but almost none of it is like for like. I have their sockets too and while great they can be hard to read and I love the wrenches but some complain they're too bulky and again that's fine as people can prefer whatever it is they want to. The only truly like for like item with Williams I believe is the hard handle screw drivers and sockets minus the markings and some claiming the heat treat may be different.You can buy a Williams ratchet for 30 bucks that uses the exact same internal components as Snap On. Your paying for the service. And there's nothing wrong with that. If the service is important enough to you to pay an extra 100 dollars for, then it is and you should pay it. I do question how it can be justified when you can just keep a spare ratchet around. But that's not to say it's not for someone. If it is, but it. If not, but the cheaper one, or two of them.
You can buy a Williams ratchet for 30 bucks that uses the exact same internal components as Snap On. Your paying for the service. And there's nothing wrong with that. If the service is important enough to you to pay an extra 100 dollars for, then it is and you should pay it. I do question how it can be justified when you can just keep a spare ratchet around. But that's not to say it's not for someone. If it is, but it. If not, but the cheaper one, or two of them.
how true this is.As a middle class DYI'r, get those starting out on budget and respect those who cannot afford or justify paying for Snapon brand since that is the brand called out.
When I can do a job(brake job, auto repair, or home repair) myself, the labor I've saved can be substantial. Enjoy buying and owning high quality USA made hand tools vs. paying someone else to do what I can do myself.
I make the repair and build-up additional high quality hand tools over time. There is something to be said about holding, using & owning high quality made USA hand tools. Full disclosure my toothbrush is made in china and I do throw them away, often.
As a very wealthy client once said, don't forget about the 'power of the zero'. That is power of one's financial net worth and the number of extra 0's attached.
If someone views SnapOn or any tool @ $100 not justified, another individual having 1 more 0 on the end of their net worth might view that $100 tool as a simple $10 purchase. To someone who's net worth is 100K and making 5 years of payments on a $40,000 new truck purchase, it is an easy $4,000 truck purchase for someone else.
Someone saved a ton on harbor freight and someone else takes pride in owning premium USA manufactured products.
Both persons feel like they got the better value.