OP
nick.koehler6
Member
Thanks for all the great advice! I am going to start saving up for snap - on tools. I plan to go to college for a diesel mechanic. It will be worth it. If you have any tools for sale. Let me know
That says a lot: hes been in the trades for near 30 years. having the truck come to him is important.
Those that are saying "buy used" have it right IMO. Spend some time just reading some of the tool threads; Take walk through the Garage sale thread, and compare what can often be had on the cheap (literally pennies on the dollar).
Just a couple of years ago I'd have have told you to pick up one of the Craftsman sets on sale for the basics. heck it was just about 8 years ago I bought such a set for my son as a "get him started set" I wouldn't do that today with the off-shoring Sears has done. (unless I found a NOS set).
You WILL hear "buy the best" (meaning SO) from many on this board. there are many tools just as good truth be told. As mentioned with SO you are buying a LOT more than "just the tool" but you are 15, not a pro, the truck doesn't make stops to your door, etc. etc.
Older USA (generally) made tools can be a hug bargain. - in no particualr order: Barcalo, Blackhawk, Bonny, Channellock, Craftsman, Crescent, Diamond, Duro/ Indestro, MAC, New Britain, P&C, Peterson (Vise Grip), Proto/Plvmb, , S-K, Snap-on, Thorsen, Vlichek, Williams, all made for the most part good tools many others did also for niche markets.
Ratchets: yes, you get what you pay for, but there are many good to great ratchets besides SO. Some have fine tooth actions. one of the earliest was the Craftsman RHFT, at 90 teeth. (45-double pawl) I bought mine new "back in the day", and they still work fine, and the rebuild kits are still available. Other very fine Ratchets: SK, Proto/Plvmb, Williams, MAC.. the list goes on.
Keep an open mind, and don't let anyone tell you "there can only be one", because even the best tool makers sometimes lay an egg...


Thanks for all the great advice! I am going to start saving up for snap - on tools. I plan to go to college for a diesel mechanic. It will be worth it. If you have any tools for sale. Let me know
I'll assume that was a joke.
It's not like he is working on a '77 F250 or something like that. rust is NOT a huge concern for a 2000 era vehicle, sure, there may be surface rust, but the chances of a seized bolt or other penetrating rust capable of breaking a 12 PT Snap-On socket? Not likely.
I'll assume that was a joke.
It's not like he is working on a '77 F250 or something like that. rust is NOT a huge concern for a 2000 era vehicle, sure, there may be surface rust, but the chances of a seized bolt or other penetrating rust capable of breaking a 12 PT Snap-On socket? Not likely.
You can get started fast with an affordable set, you are young, if you lose the stuff or someone steals it you are not crushed. Don't have to squeeze yourself or go in debt.
My dad made his living for forty years with Craftsman tools.
Start saving, but if you go to a trade school don't buy any Snappy new until you get there. They have a discount program for students.
SK is one of the most solid USA brands out there, I've been buying a lot more recently. Incredible quality for the price.
Just don't get caught up in the name brand (Snap-On/Matco/MAC) contest that plagues a lot of shops/techs (same ******** as the Ford/Chevy/Dodge or Cummins/Powerstroke/Duramax **** measuring bull). Spend your money wisely the first time around.
Agree on SK. I have beat the ever-loving snot out of a set of S-K combo wrenches for the past while and they just come back asking for more. Dead nuts reliable tools that I will put up against anything. I mean stupid **** like using a larger combo wrench hooked box end over open end for double leverage, hammering on them with an engineer's hammer, etc. They love that ****.
Thanks for all the great advice! I am going to start saving up for snap - on tools. I plan to go to college for a diesel mechanic. It will be worth it. If you have any tools for sale. Let me know
^what he said. The one and only real exception to the above is flare wrenches. A less than pro quality flare wrench can ruin your day. But for most stuff lesser is still acceptable for most jobs. Compare prices from craigslist, GJ classifieds, etc. to HF. If you can get "truck brand" stuff for only a little more than HF pricing then do it. If not then buy the HF stuff to get you buy until you're sure you're going pro.
Thanks for all the great advice! I am going to start saving up for snap - on tools. I plan to go to college for a diesel mechanic. It will be worth it. If you have any tools for sale. Let me know
. Your money is not well invested in tools at this point in your life. That diesel school is going to be expensive. I started out with ALL Craftsman tools when I was ~15. That was when they were all made in the USA. They were and still are great. I still have pretty much all of them. One exception is their ratchets, which are complete garbage (36 tooth, loose pawl connection, sloppy action). In recent years, I have upgraded pretty much all my tools to Snap On.
MY OPINION: Get yourself a high end (Snap On, Matco, Cornwell, etc) fine tooth 3/8" ratchet to start off with; your 3/8" ratchet is the most-reached-for tool in your box regardless of what car you're working on.
^what he said. The one and only real exception to the above is flare wrenches. A less than pro quality flare wrench can ruin your day. But for most stuff lesser is still acceptable for most jobs. Compare prices from craigslist, GJ classifieds, etc. to HF. If you can get "truck brand" stuff for only a little more than HF pricing then do it. If not then buy the HF stuff to get you buy until you're sure you're going pro.