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Snap-on warranty

brichter

Member
Joined
Feb 3, 2018
Messages
5
Hi, all. First post but I’ve been lurking a few months trying to figure out the best way to deal with bent caster brackets on my toolbox.

Just had an interesting experience with Snap-On with ordering parts for my KR1000A rollaway. I recently bought a new house and during the move, the movers didn’t pay attention when I told them that they needed to have the box flush up against the side of the truck before they strapped it down. They left an inch or two gap and by the time we got the box to the new house the two stationary wheel brackets were bent and now the box doesn’t sit level. I also have problems with the drawer slides, the rubber dog bones came out and they don’t stay closed if the box is tilted at all.

I called their 800 number to find out if I could purchase 2 replacement casters with brackets, the guy who helped me said yes they were available, but they had been superseded so I would need all four. While discussing this with him, he asked me if I had any other issues with the box so I told him about the drawer slides. He told me the drawer slides had also been superseded to a new design and asked me how many drawers total were in my toolbox, I let him know there were 14 and he did the look up on those. He told me that 26 of them were the same part number and the one wide drawer on the bottom uses different slides so had a different part number.

When I told him I was ready to give him my credit card information for the order, he told me that everything was covered under warranty. I was happily surprised that they would warrantee the casters, because I had told him that they were damaged by the movers, and I had previously tried to work out the replacement of the drawer slides, but all of the local tool dealers I could find would only do one drawer at a time. I also find it interesting that they were willing to do this for me, even though I left the mechanics trade in 2000 after 23 years and became a software engineer. He was aware of this because he asked me who my tool dealer was and I told him that I was no longer a mechanic, and they’re shipping everything to my home completely free of charge.

A lot of folks like to bash Snap-On because of the price, but this is one case where it really appears you’re getting what you pay for when you buy them. I know the wheel set is about $1000 from their website, and I didn’t bother looking up a price for the drawer slides but I imagine it’s pretty pricey when you’re looking at 28 of them. Anyway, going on the premise that a satisfied customer usually never tells anyone in a dissatisfied customer will tell at least 10 people, I figured I,d give them a shout out because I’m definitely a satisfied customer now!
 
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Professional Tool User

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 9, 2018
Messages
1,835
Location
BC
With their tool boxes, Snap on is usually pretty good when it comes to replacing slides and casters. With the tool truck, at the end of the day, level of service you get depends on the person you are dealing with. My current dealer will warranty my flea market stuff but isn't the most diligent making sure I get my back ordered items on time. With astronomical prices, the service better be excellent or there's loads of other high end and cheap options I can burn my money on.
 

xin

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 13, 2017
Messages
697
Location
ARKANSAS - NWA
Hi, all. First post but I’ve been lurking a few months trying to figure out the best way to deal with bent caster brackets on my toolbox.

Just had an interesting experience with Snap-On with ordering parts for my KR1000A rollaway. I recently bought a new house and during the move, the movers didn’t pay attention when I told them that they needed to have the box flush up against the side of the truck before they strapped it down. They left an inch or two gap and by the time we got the box to the new house the two stationary wheel brackets were bent and now the box doesn’t sit level. I also have problems with the drawer slides, the rubber dog bones came out and they don’t stay closed if the box is tilted at all.

I called their 800 number to find out if I could purchase 2 replacement casters with brackets, the guy who helped me said yes they were available, but they had been superseded so I would need all four. While discussing this with him, he asked me if I had any other issues with the box so I told him about the drawer slides. He told me the drawer slides had also been superseded to a new design and asked me how many drawers total were in my toolbox, I let him know there were 14 and he did the look up on those. He told me that 26 of them were the same part number and the one wide drawer on the bottom uses different slides so had a different part number.

When I told him I was ready to give him my credit card information for the order, he told me that everything was covered under warranty. I was happily surprised that they would warrantee the casters, because I had told him that they were damaged by the movers, and I had previously tried to work out the replacement of the drawer slides, but all of the local tool dealers I could find would only do one drawer at a time. I also find it interesting that they were willing to do this for me, even though I left the mechanics trade in 2000 after 23 years and became a software engineer. He was aware of this because he asked me who my tool dealer was and I told him that I was no longer a mechanic, and they’re shipping everything to my home completely free of charge.

A lot of folks like to bash Snap-On because of the price, but this is one case where it really appears you’re getting what you pay for when you buy them. I know the wheel set is about $1000 from their website, and I didn’t bother looking up a price for the drawer slides but I imagine it’s pretty pricey when you’re looking at 28 of them. Anyway, going on the premise that a satisfied customer usually never tells anyone in a dissatisfied customer will tell at least 10 people, I figured I,d give them a shout out because I’m definitely a satisfied customer now!

QUALITY over QUANTITY is what I was always taught, along with buying QUALITY tools.

The same people who complain about the price spend $300+ a month on cigs and another $200+ on liquor.
 

mikebaker1129

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 16, 2014
Messages
1,576
Location
Huffman,TX
I have had great service from Snap on corporate and a couple dealers.
My only semi negative experience was with a dealer that is no longer a dealer for Snap on. Many shops would not allow him on the property.
The new guy on the route is trying really hard to repair the many damaged relationships the previous dealer created.
 

Finky198

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 25, 2014
Messages
2,120
Location
North East
^
^
That is excellent advice something, I am glad I learned along time ago from friends and family... Its gotten me much further along in a shorter amount of time thru multiple careers.. not just the tools but knowledge to spend wisely in general...

Add people's daily coffee, snack, breakfast, lunch, and dinner to that list not all at the same time of course.

I don't have a snap on box, but my experience has been the same with the warranty process...
 
Last edited:

joel63

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 9, 2012
Messages
1,909
Location
Central FL
Hi, all. First post but I’ve been lurking a few months trying to figure out the best way to deal with bent caster brackets on my toolbox.

Just had an interesting experience with Snap-On with ordering parts for my KR1000A rollaway. I recently bought a new house and during the move, the movers didn’t pay attention when I told them that they needed to have the box flush up against the side of the truck before they strapped it down. They left an inch or two gap and by the time we got the box to the new house the two stationary wheel brackets were bent and now the box doesn’t sit level. I also have problems with the drawer slides, the rubber dog bones came out and they don’t stay closed if the box is tilted at all.

I called their 800 number to find out if I could purchase 2 replacement casters with brackets, the guy who helped me said yes they were available, but they had been superseded so I would need all four. While discussing this with him, he asked me if I had any other issues with the box so I told him about the drawer slides. He told me the drawer slides had also been superseded to a new design and asked me how many drawers total were in my toolbox, I let him know there were 14 and he did the look up on those. He told me that 26 of them were the same part number and the one wide drawer on the bottom uses different slides so had a different part number.

When I told him I was ready to give him my credit card information for the order, he told me that everything was covered under warranty. I was happily surprised that they would warrantee the casters, because I had told him that they were damaged by the movers, and I had previously tried to work out the replacement of the drawer slides, but all of the local tool dealers I could find would only do one drawer at a time. I also find it interesting that they were willing to do this for me, even though I left the mechanics trade in 2000 after 23 years and became a software engineer. He was aware of this because he asked me who my tool dealer was and I told him that I was no longer a mechanic, and they’re shipping everything to my home completely free of charge.

A lot of folks like to bash Snap-On because of the price, but this is one case where it really appears you’re getting what you pay for when you buy them. I know the wheel set is about $1000 from their website, and I didn’t bother looking up a price for the drawer slides but I imagine it’s pretty pricey when you’re looking at 28 of them. Anyway, going on the premise that a satisfied customer usually never tells anyone in a dissatisfied customer will tell at least 10 people, I figured I,d give them a shout out because I’m definitely a satisfied customer now!

".......There is a difference" :thumbup:
 
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Mustang1167

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2011
Messages
949
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
I don’t purchase a lot of snap on tools but I had an issue with a purchase recently that was covered with a full replacement of the tool. I was happy with the outcome but thankfully the defective tool didn’t slow down any work.
 

Flivver250

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2013
Messages
797
Location
Florida/Dubai
I started buying Snap-On in 1974. Still buy them today, along with a number of other US forged tools like Wright, SK, Williams, Klein, Mayhew, Wilde and more. While I rarely break a tool, I have always been served well. Most recently I returned a set of screw drivers and pry bars to SO that were bought around 1978. The metal was 100% fine, the ancient black plastic handles were brittle and crumbling due to age. They were older than the SO guy serving me who by the way I had never met or done business with before. He told me he could not replace the grips because the handles were a couple generations discontinued, so he replaced the entire sets. How do you beat that? When they say lifetime, they mean lifetime.
 

Wamsutta

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 8, 2014
Messages
10,874
Location
Amarillo, Texas
Snap-on is too easy with their warranty. I think they should require people to send in detailed pictures of their tools and tool boxes.
 
Joined
Jul 24, 2016
Messages
3,371
QUALITY over QUANTITY is what I was always taught, along with buying QUALITY tools.

The same people who complain about the price spend $300+ a month on cigs and another $200+ on liquor.

Or $200 a month on their damn pocket phone. :lol: Talk about wasting money.
 

Fbmoose48

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 26, 2017
Messages
202
Location
GJ
QUALITY over QUANTITY is what I was always taught, along with buying QUALITY tools.

The same people who complain about the price spend $300+ a month on cigs and another $200+ on liquor.

QUALITY over QUANTITY is what I was always taught, along with buying QUALITY tools.

The same people who complain about the price spend $300+ a month on cigs and another $200+ on liquor.

Or $200 a month on their damn pocket phone. :lol: Talk about wasting money.

How people choose to spend their money is irrelevant. I'm sure there are plenty of drunks smoking cigs and playing on their iPhone right now wondering what's wrong with someone for spending $150 on a ratchet. Who knows, maybe they even have a forum to post about it in. But if we all keep it to ourselves the world would be a better place.
 

kythri

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2007
Messages
6,330
Location
Lebanon, OR
Snap-on is too easy with their warranty. I think they should require people to send in detailed pictures of their tools and tool boxes.

Make sure to let us know when you get a position on their board and propose this change.
 
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