Xcursion88
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2013
- Messages
- 785
Snap on is probably better, good enough to ever matter strength wise? Probably not to 98% of people.
I can't recall when, if ever breaking a non consumable non electric hand tool, if you are a buffoon who makes a habit of trying to remove semi truck lug nuts with 1/4 ratchets then perhaps it might make a difference, but even those of us with those icky lowly old craftsman USA socket probably have done quite a bit of work without having sockets spontaneously exploding with the force of a small nuclear device destroying the work and killing your dog.
This is the mistake...its asdumptions.
SK is not inferior to SO in any way whatsoever.
Unless you're talking non USA tools...then Snap on wins because SK has zero...i Reoeat zero...tools made outside the United States of America.
Snap on...yes even ones stamped snap on...some tools are coming from some places outside the United States of America. They've some new pliers that look like an adjustable wrench....those are stamped snap-on and made in Spain.
SK is 101 percent USA
Strength?
Equal..
We've broken both brands here but it's user error on all accounts. In other words using a tool that is too light for the job attempted.
The tech is too lazy to fetch the proper tool and just uses what's right there at the cart.
We just exploded an 18mm socket taking off a seized caliper bracket bolt from a Chevy avalanche. Sound like inferior strength? What if I told you the tech used a chrome 3/8 drive 18mm with breaker bar and a small fifyeen inch pipe on the end of that.
Stupidity anyone? Laziness? Instead of taking the extra 60 seconds and grabbing a 1/2 " impact wobble and gun
He used the lighter product. Why? Time. Time is money. Shaving time off over the week might mean an extra 100 bucks in pocket.
Those kind of stories rught there are all over the place in the industry.
It's just the details of stupidity are always left out.
. When you’re not flat rate, it isn’t worth the hustle