What do the truck brands do that my Carlyle, Craftsman, Gearwrench and Harbor Freight branded tools don’t do?
The answer: Not a ******** thing.
Ummm, not ****** break when I'm charging somebody $75hr and I'm 50 miles from the nearest town.
What do the truck brands do that my Carlyle, Craftsman, Gearwrench and Harbor Freight branded tools don’t do?
The answer: Not a ******** thing.
It depends on the tool. I wouldn't say Snap-on and MAC are apples to apples on everything. The only thing MAC comes close to on quality are sockets. And as far as Matco goes, everything they have is rebadged GearWrench.


Ummm, not ****** break when I'm charging somebody $75hr and I'm 50 miles from the nearest town.
I have a great dealer, always has specials and promotions, never pay list for anything, stops every week, doesn't blink at anything broken handed to him. tool life is good. No reason for me to buy elsewhere. Oh ... and he lets us drink beer on his truck also.
That's because he want you make a bad decision when your drunk and buy a new toolbox.
ummm, not ****** break when i'm charging somebody $75hr and i'm 50 miles from the nearest town.
So by using that logic a truck should have complete bumper to bumper warranty throughout the life of the truck? And if you were to sell it would still transfer right?
I'm a pro mechanic and I am a huge snap on fan. But in my opinion the warranty aspect is terrible.
If snap on day is Wednesday and you break your only ratchet on Thursday what do you do? Sure he would probably be glad to meet you at 7 when he gets back home 50 miles from you.
As opposed to breaking a harbor freight ratchet, getting through the day with your back up (because buying 2 is affordable) then after work driving 10 minutes to get a replacement. Now this has never happened to me, it's just a thought.
Ive broken plenty of snapon stuff, one call to my dealer gets a replacement coming and if needed he will do his best to get it to me.
I always wonder what guys bitching about snap on do for a living, every occupation has price options of quality of what they do.
Me reading these daily threads complaining about Snap-On prices or comparing totally different things
Go ahead and count me in as a KoolAid drinker.
I think Snap-on is one of the best things I can spend money on.
I'm never disappointed with anything I buy from Snap-on.![]()

If you notice, the guys that post pictures of their Snap-on purchases usually always have a low post count. My guess is they're too busy earning money to have time to post.
Are Snap On's tools expensive? For the most part and at retail pricing, they sure are. Is complaining about it going to change that fact? Nope. The only recourse one has is to bring their business elsewhere. Tool trucks will still be around long after many of us are dead and gone. Their target market hasn't changed for almost 100 years and business around that target market has remained profitable. If you don't have a truck guy and buy at retail from their website, you're most likely outside of their target market and are better off finding alternate avenues and brands.
Most of the negative opinions shared on this and the hundreds of other threads like it come from individual experiences. If someone is unhappy about a product or a company, they're more likely to voice it than someone who has been happy with the same product or company. With Snap On and pretty much any other truck brand, many different factors come into play when determining customer satisfaction. First off, if you have a crappy dealer, the experience is doomed from the start. Another issue is customers that think they have a right to be disappointed if they want to operate outside the company's terms of service or warranty policy. Having a good truck guy can allow for some coloring outside the lines with regards to those things but if one (for example) was to walk onto a tool truck on day one with a bucket of busted, rusty tools that are older than they are and expect the driver to hand them shiny new replacements under the "lifetime warranty" all while balking at the prices of their tools and asking for a free hat, then they'll likely be sadly disappointed with the results and shouldn't be surprised if the driver don't drop by to see them as regularly as some other clients.
The driver is in this business to make money. Good drivers are in it to make money and provide good customer service. If you're not profitable and sensible to do business with, they will avoid you. Sure, they'll come around regularly if you owe them money (wouldn't you?). But if you're hard to get payments from or act like an *** when they do show up, they'll be less likely to spend much time on you after your business is concluded. They have hundreds of good clients they can spend their time on. They're not going to chase you in the hopes you'll begrudgingly spend a couple hundred dollars a year with them.
Snap On isn't for everyone. They're just another brand that nobody is forcing anyone to buy.
I like Snap-On but they need to get real with these prices. At the rate they're increasing they're going to have 10pc combo wrench sets at a grand in 20 years. Its already at nearly $600. $60 per piece for a few ounces of some common forged tool steel. I don't care how ******** of a SO lover you are, you have to agree that's ludicrous (or be willfully ignorant).
$395.55 on snap on website. At least get some facts, damn they're already expensive but then you go add an imaginary 50%I like Snap-On but they need to get real with these prices. At the rate they're increasing they're going to have 10pc combo wrench sets at a grand in 20 years. Its already at nearly $600. $60 per piece for a few ounces of some common forged tool steel. I don't care how ******** of a SO lover you are, you have to agree that's ludicrous (or be willfully ignorant).
Surely they can be more creative in boosting profitability than increasing the whole entire catalog by 5% every year.
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Me reading these daily threads complaining about Snap-On prices or comparing totally different things
I like Snap-On but they need to get real with these prices. At the rate they're increasing they're going to have 10pc combo wrench sets at a grand in 20 years. Its already at nearly $600. $60 per piece for a few ounces of some common forged tool steel. I don't care how ******** of a SO lover you are, you have to agree that's ludicrous (or be willfully ignorant).
Surely they can be more creative in boosting profitability than increasing the whole entire catalog by 5% every year.
The art of tool buying is picking what each brand does best and matching it to what your work requirements really need .
For the OP maybe avoid sets and just get a few really needed sizes.
$395.55 on snap on website. At least get some facts, damn they're already expensive but then you go add an imaginary 50%
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One poster complained that snap on raises their prices 5% a year.
Who doesn't?

Yeah, gotta pay off the snap-on dealer somehow.
Get some facts, try soexlm.
im interested to see if their current business model holds up, more and more i see techs buying from online and other places with snap on where they perceive the value. myself personally i would much rather buy online than pay the the premium for snap on.