To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Starting out tech...what brands do you guys recommend?

nissan_crawler

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2008
Messages
9,638
Location
Wichita, KS
Let me just put it this way: most techs I know, those who care about the quality of their work (tries to obtain quality US made parts, uses torque wrench on lugs nuts, etc. etc.), use mostly Snap-on.

"Techs" that just want to get the job done and out the door with no regard for the quality of their work, generally have a mix of whatever cheapest tools were on sale from sears or the no-name tool truck.

DON'T think I'm saying the the tools make the mechanic..... obviously not. All I'm saying is the mind set of those that buy Snap-on, more often than not, they take their job a little more seriously than the bargain hunters.

Funny, our crew has some of the top techs on it, and we all use Craftsman. Most of the guys with Snap-On can't get a good portion of the jobs done, because they don't have enough tools to do it. They just push their $3,000 toy toolbox around with $15,000 worth of basic wrenches and sockets, and do the jobs they can, and then borrow from everybody.

P.S. I torque my lugnuts...with a $9 torque wrench from the cummins tool truck. It makes calibration every year.:lol_hitti

Actually, since we brought that up...number of guys at work that have Snap-On torque wrenches...MAYBE 1/4. Number that have HF, 3/4. Guess which group has never had a torque wrench fail calibration? It's not the first one.

Well I'm gonna step in here and give my nickels worth. When I started out I had a damn old 2 drawer tote box, but it was loaded with tools...Craftsman, SK, Proto, Wizard etc. I twisted those old wrenches for years and bought more a little at a time off the trucks as I could afford it. I bought a bigger box and continued to fill it with tools on sale from Craftsman, yard sales and flea markets. Invest in a set of Snap-on line wrenches...they are very well worth it! Later on as you go you can always buy the tool truck brands as you can AFFORD it. That $60- $100 tool truck payment some guys make will buy you a decent amount of groceries (if you shop wisely). I have worked with many young guys at the dealerships over the years that had these huge *** toolboxes and nothing in them because all they could afford was the box payment. I would rather see a guy with a decent box full of tools he knew how to use (brand not important) than some guy trying to keep up with the "Jones's" with a big new EMPTY box trying to impress someone.
Bottom line....learn your craft...learn it well and don't let anybody put you down just because your working with a Craftsman wrench. Oh...by the way...I retired from twisting wrenches after 35 years as Mechanic, shop owner & bodyman/painter. I've been there.. Good luck.

One more thing........the brand of tools a man uses ain't got **** to do with his quality of work and professionalism.

Excellent post. Like I said, at work there's the guy with a plain box, and lots of mixed tools that can do damn near any job...and then there's the guy with a tiny snap-on box with a handful of basic tools.

I have a large percentage of Craftsman tools. Guess who people usually come to for that oddball tool they need? It's not the Snap-On guys. People at work comment on the tools I have. Well, yeah. I have an $1800 box. They have one 1/2 or 2/3 the size that they paid $6,000 for. My sockets cost me $100, theirs cost them $1000. My 1/4"-1 1/2" wrench set cost me $150, their 3/8-3/4" wrench set cost $200.

Especially for a new guy, buy quality, but no need to pay for the name, craftsman sockets/extensions and pro wrenches do just fine. Spend the money on specialty items you'll need.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

olds88

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2008
Messages
466
Location
New York, NY
Well i am going into the automotive field.
so as far as wrenches go i think i will be getting a nice big set of cman pro ones. And i like the gearwrench ratcheting wrenches...i think im going to pick a couple sets up while there on sale at sears.
The C-Man Pro wrenches you are using are probably made by S-K. The new ones are reportedly not S-K, so you might as well look into a set of S-K Superkrome wrenches. IMO they are 2nd to Snap-on.

as far as sockets, i'll stick with the cman sockets i have, until i decide otherwise. Unless i buy some swivels, i was looking at matco's swivels but people on here don't seem to like matco. but ratchets i will probably stick with snap on, i really like the dual 80, i own a couple of them.

Just get Snap-on sockets, especially if you're going to buy universals. The Snap-on universals are much higher quality... just today at work I was comparing my boss's Matco 3/8 universal adaper, and his Snap-on equivelant. There is no comparison.
 

olds88

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2008
Messages
466
Location
New York, NY
Funny, our crew has some of the top techs on it, and we all use Craftsman. Most of the guys with Snap-On can't get a good portion of the jobs done, because they don't have enough tools to do it. They just push their $3,000 toy toolbox around with $15,000 worth of basic wrenches and sockets, and do the jobs they can, and then borrow from everybody.

Funny, my BOSS has been borrowing from ME lately... some of his junk Taiwan PT Tools stuff isn't cuttin it!

P.S. I torque my lugnuts...with a $9 torque wrench from the cummins tool truck. It makes calibration every year.:lol_hitti

I torque lug nuts with a nearly new Snap-on click type 1/2 inch torque wrench that cost me $0. (yup, Dad gave it to me) :pimpflash:pimpflash:pimpflash

Actually, since we brought that up...number of guys at work that have Snap-On torque wrenches...MAYBE 1/4. Number that have HF, 3/4. Guess which group has never had a torque wrench fail calibration? It's not the first one.

They probably leave them screwed in with the spring compressed all the time.
 

Crank1

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2007
Messages
277
I personally doesnt care what other people are sitting here saying, for me, the so called "perceived feel" is that SNAP ON tools work best for me, they have little things that make a big difference to me, one is ergonomics, granted I went from using Craftsman cheap line to Snap-On, so the Pro Line may vary, but I know when I would have broken a cheap Craftman ratchet breaking torque on a component, my Snap On ratchets have held in there. I've literally broken a Snap On ratchet in half before, gear end and handle end, right between the 2, but the gear never stripped once, just POP and it was in 2 pieces. Of course I was using a 24" 15 ton jack handle on a 1/4" drive ratchet. I like how Snap On extensions have the knurling on the end, so if you can run the thing with your hands, rather than putting a ratchet on it sometimes if you need to, and it their tools all around work better for me... Call it dumb, or say I'm young and stupid, but I've probably logged more maintenance hours than some people in here talking(Certainly not all) on components that cost more than some peoples life savings. When I need tools, I need GOOD tools, and I need them to work when I use them, I cant have stripped screws, round heads off bolts, I need quality tools, and I think that if its good enough for the entire United States Marines, it's probably good enough to use at home or on my Chevy too... Take this however you may, I'm just throwing my 0.02 cents out there, and take it how you wish, but if I can afford it, I'll have Snap On tools every time.
Brandon
 

paramudduck

Well-known member
Joined
May 24, 2007
Messages
1,758
Location
ohio
but if I can afford it said:
And that boils down what we have been saying. "If you can afford it." Any tool you chose is great. But to jump in and say that a person can not do any thing as a tech without using "Snap on" Is BS to the highest degree.

I have known many excellent tech over the years who had very few SO tools and most of them were the special ones only Snap makes.

As for the techs with Snap on being the best. In the situation the OP posted fresh out of tech school. The guys with huge debts over their heads working at flat rate are the one who skip corners trying to beat the clock.

Or else they get so far in debt they quit the field. The Snap on drivers don't get the repo'd and used tools they sell from trade in that often!
 

nissan_crawler

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2008
Messages
9,638
Location
Wichita, KS
The C-Man Pro wrenches you are using are probably made by S-K. The new ones are reportedly not S-K, so you might as well look into a set of S-K Superkrome wrenches. IMO they are 2nd to Snap-on.



Just get Snap-on sockets, especially if you're going to buy universals. The Snap-on universals are much higher quality... just today at work I was comparing my boss's Matco 3/8 universal adaper, and his Snap-on equivelant. There is no comparison.

My C-Pro aren't SK (thank god) and they work great. Again, my standing offer is that I will trade any of my SK wrenches for a C-Pro, or even Toptul equivalent.

I agree on the universals about going with Snappy, there's no comparison.

Funny, my BOSS has been borrowing from ME lately... some of his junk Taiwan PT Tools stuff isn't cuttin it!



I torque lug nuts with a nearly new Snap-on click type 1/2 inch torque wrench that cost me $0. (yup, Dad gave it to me) :pimpflash:pimpflash:pimpflash



They probably leave them screwed in with the spring compressed all the time.

Nobody was talking about junk. I have a hard time understanding what you do. You have a small box, with a limited amount of tools (not that there's anything wrong with that, everybody starts that way), but your boss borrows tools from you? It doesn't seem like it's a mechanic orientated business.

Everybody at work takes the tension off their torque wrenches, nobody's that stupid.

Again, you're talking about tools your dad has handed to you. The OP is talking about buying tools, and you're not getting that.

If my daddy handed me Snap-On tools, I would take every one he offered. However, he didn't, and it's not in the card to buy them. You can't compare the two.

I personally doesnt care what other people are sitting here saying, for me, the so called "perceived feel" is that SNAP ON tools work best for me, they have little things that make a big difference to me, one is ergonomics, granted I went from using Craftsman cheap line to Snap-On, so the Pro Line may vary, but I know when I would have broken a cheap Craftman ratchet breaking torque on a component, my Snap On ratchets have held in there. I've literally broken a Snap On ratchet in half before, gear end and handle end, right between the 2, but the gear never stripped once, just POP and it was in 2 pieces. Of course I was using a 24" 15 ton jack handle on a 1/4" drive ratchet. I like how Snap On extensions have the knurling on the end, so if you can run the thing with your hands, rather than putting a ratchet on it sometimes if you need to, and it their tools all around work better for me... Call it dumb, or say I'm young and stupid, but I've probably logged more maintenance hours than some people in here talking(Certainly not all) on components that cost more than some peoples life savings. When I need tools, I need GOOD tools, and I need them to work when I use them, I cant have stripped screws, round heads off bolts, I need quality tools, and I think that if its good enough for the entire United States Marines, it's probably good enough to use at home or on my Chevy too... Take this however you may, I'm just throwing my 0.02 cents out there, and take it how you wish, but if I can afford it, I'll have Snap On tools every time.
Brandon

Several things I see here:

1. You went from bottom line Craftsman to top line Snap-On, not even close to a fair comparison.

2. Everybody had suggested Snap-On ratchets, not Craftsman, so that's a moot point.

3. You were being a f'in idiot having a 24" cheater on a 1/4" ratchet. P.S. I've stripped my 1/4" Snap-On, and it's never seen a cheater pipe. P.S. Your handle broke there instead of the gears due to the stress point you were putting on it. If it was an equal strength handle the entire way, the gears would have been gone. It's been my experience that 99% of people that break ANY brand of ratchet, were being complete retards while doing so (yes, I'm included in this).

4. I've never had a problem with stripping screws or bolt heads with my Craftsman tools. If somebody has this problem, I doubt it's the "tool" (at least not the one made of steel). Perhaps one would be better off learning how to use tools properly, rather than throwing money at something that's not the issue.

Last but not least, as eschoendorff, paramudduck and I keep trying to point out...

We're talking about a new guy, NO TOOLS, most likely limited budget.

Yes, he could buy a $3,000 Snap-On box the size of a suitcase, with another $10k spent on a couple of pliers, basic screwdrivers, a few wrench sets, a hammer or two, and a socket set.

He could then gaze longingly at his tools with stars in his eyes as he strokes his flank plus wrenches, twirls his screwdrivers, and polishes his ratchets. However, he still won't have enough tools to properly fix my f'in bicycle, and his toolbox will be smaller than my 4 year old nephew's.

He could also buy a $3,000 C-Pro box that he'll never grow out of, spend $5k filling it with C-Pro wrenches, Craftsman sockets and extensions, every C-Pro or Knipex plier made, and all kinds of Estwing hammers. Then he can take the $5k saved, and go buy Snap-On ratchets, and all sorts of specialty tools he'll need.

He'll be prepared to work damn near any issue needed while the other guy fondles his meager stockpile of shiny new Snap-On tools.

I can tell you really quickly which tech would stay in my shop, and it wouldn't be Mr. Snap-On.

I've had my fill of the Mr. Snap-On's. They scoff at your tools, then an hour later, they're begging to borrow a specialty tool they can't afford, because they still owe $5k on the truck, and I tell them to f' off.
 

Merkava_4

Banned
Joined
Dec 26, 2007
Messages
14,518
Location
Clovis, CA.
its all very nice stuff, but some of it, like plain old wrenches i just don't feel a difference between snap on and others like cman pro, i do not like the regular cman wrenches.

The difference becomes more apparent as you use them. SO wrenches are made from superior steel with superior heat treatment practices, superior forging dyes with the offset built in, superior fit and finish, superior balance, a nice thin box wall for getting in close, the list goes on and on. . .
 

eschoendorff

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2005
Messages
8,991
Location
Michigan
personally, i don't care how the tool feels or how shiny or expensive it is. i just like that it works. to me, if i look in a drawer and see pristine never used shiny things, i see wasted $$. tools that never paid me back. i mean... they're tools, not jewelry. i only clean them if there's coolant. old grease and oil all over them mean rustproof to me lol.

get some ratchets and wrenches. whatever brand you want. use them until you feel it's time to upgrade.

buy the craftsman 1/2 and 3/8 impacts that strongly resemble the IR2135 and 2115 because they are identical with the exception of the nickel plated steel front hammer case which makes them slightly heavier.

buy any brand 6pt impact socket, a swivel, and some extensions. i regularly beat on 1/2in sunex impact sockets at work and have yet to need to upgrade them. i got 3/8 snapon impacts that were on sale- they're harder to read and the square ends are starting to round out. nevermind chrome sockets until you absolutely need the thin wall or the cman 265pc set goes on sale. impact sockets work with ratchets. who cares what it looks like, get the job done. when you move up from rookie you'll figure out what you need.

in other words you probably already have everything you need to start out. work hard, get real good, and figure out what you need to make more money

Dude, I know you're new here, but you are like a breath of fresh air!!!!!:beer::beer::beer::beer:
 

eschoendorff

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2005
Messages
8,991
Location
Michigan
The difference becomes more apparent as you use them. SO wrenches are made from superior steel with superior heat treatment practices, superior forging dyes with the offset built in, superior fit and finish, superior balance, a nice thin box wall for getting in close, the list goes on and on. . .

And the flare wrenches have a special design where the hex is forged off-center. Most people think that it is a mistake, but they are simply new to the proprietary Snap On "Oh-****-the-wrench-moved-in the-forge-die" technology.:lol_hitti
 

olds88

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2008
Messages
466
Location
New York, NY
And that boils down what we have been saying. "If you can afford it."

Theres no reason that anyone with a job can't afford a basic set of Snap-on ratchets and sockets. if you are that broke, that's what eBay is for....... I would think people on this board know that!
 

Merkava_4

Banned
Joined
Dec 26, 2007
Messages
14,518
Location
Clovis, CA.
Theres no reason that anyone with a job can't afford a basic set of Snap-on ratchets and sockets. if you are that broke, that's what eBay is for....... I would think people on this board know that!

If I had it all to start over again, I'd probably get Snap-on ratchets and extensions, PROTO sockets, Cornwell wrenches, MAC screwdrivers, and then Klein-Knipex-Armstrong for pliers. :pimpflash
 

Thumper

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2005
Messages
2,209
Location
N.E.Ga
Theres no reason that anyone with a job can't afford a basic set of Snap-on ratchets and sockets. if you are that broke, that's what eBay is for....... I would think people on this board know that!

LOL......How would you know......apparrantly your Dad gives you everything... geeze gimme a break. If you got time to stand around comparing tools with your boss....your not very busy.:shocking: The original poster is whipping out the cash to PAY for his tools and just wants an idea of getting quality without having to eat beenie weenies all week to pay for them. We all know Snap-On is top of the line but it's not the only choice out there. This ain't a storybook world we live in.... so you do what you have to get by and survive. If that means NOT going assshole deep in debt to the Snap-On man right off, so be it. It does not mean the end of the world ...it means your smart not to piss away your whole paycheck on the tool truck.
 

speed bump

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
6,317
Location
Butte Montana
The difference becomes more apparent as you use them. SO wrenches are made from superior steel with superior heat treatment practices, superior forging dyes with the offset built in, superior fit and finish, superior balance, a nice thin box wall for getting in close, the list goes on and on. . .

Somehow I highly doubt you know what your talking about. SO builds their wrenches to AISI, ASME, and ASTM standards just like everyone else. If you really believe that SOs wrench forging practices are superior anyway send me one and i'll chuck it up it in a Tinius-Olsen 60k machine and do the same with a Craftsman wrench and see what happens.

Tinius%20Olsen%2060k%20machine.jpg
 
Last edited:

paramudduck

Well-known member
Joined
May 24, 2007
Messages
1,758
Location
ohio
olds88 have you looked at the current Snap on prices on ebay? About 80 percent of the time those things are selling for way more then they cost new.

We are not saying any thing bad about Snap on just that the initial cost will kill a starting tech. This is a person with no or few tools trying to get a set to do his job with. To make the money to live on and upgrade or expand his collection.

For the price a 936 goes for on ebay you could buy 3 or 4 big dawgs. The big dawg may noot be as pretty but it does the job.

And that is the whole point of the matter being able to do the job. Starting out with just one 1/2 ratchet because thats all you could afford from ebay will kill you if it breaks. And I have the scars to show that they do. But if you get two for less money plus get a set of sockets still for less then the 936 you are ahead.

Some times you can't get that Snap on fixed now! If this happens you are sol if you can't borrow one. You may have a great Snap on guy but he may not. Heck it's even quite possible he may work in a area where the nearest Snap on oute is a couple of towns away.
 

Moose-LandTran

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
15,945
Location
The Brink of Insanity (England)
Speed Bump, i'd like to see how my Elora wrenches compare to Snap-on and other brands in that machine. I swear by them and for the quality and the price they're hard to beat (for me anyway) I'd love a full set of Snap-on ones but mine do their job just fine for a fraction of the price.
 

wantedabiggergarage

Member Emeritus
Joined
Feb 25, 2006
Messages
3,897
Location
Independence, MO, USA.
Some times you can't get that Snap on fixed now! If this happens you are sol if you can't borrow one. You may have a great Snap on guy but he may not. Heck it's even quite possible he may work in a area where the nearest Snap on oute is a couple of towns away.

Exactly the reason I stated in #5, you need to deal with both who your comfortable with (ergonomics as well as financially) as well as who supplies you (Sears, LOCAL tool truck, etc). I have some good Snap~on tools, and I have some that need warrantied, but NO dealer. That is just a PITA.
It is also why I recommended getting the impact sockets, in general, off the truck. I have some Sears (have to be warrantied via the catalog only method), as well as some Sunex (not local), etc.

snapon has a program for students i think the discount is 55% (better than dealer cost)
This also depends on local. By searching online, some of the programs (one 10% one listed here) appears to be THROUGH the truck dealers, as compared with coming from corporate.

https://buy1.snapon.com/sep/
 

Pedro-snapon

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 9, 2008
Messages
151
Location
USA, ca
Somehow I highly doubt you know what your talking about. SO builds their wrenches to AISI, ASME, and ASTM standards just like everyone else. If you really believe that SOs wrench forging practices are superior anyway send me one and i'll chuck it up it in a Tinius-Olsen 60k machine and do the same with a Craftsman wrench and see what happens.

Tinius%20Olsen%2060k%20machine.jpg

what size wrench do you want and pm me your address i'll send you a flank drive plus one and a regular wrench.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Pedro-snapon

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 9, 2008
Messages
151
Location
USA, ca
Exactly the reason I stated in #5, you need to deal with both who your comfortable with (ergonomics as well as financially) as well as who supplies you (Sears, LOCAL tool truck, etc). I have some good Snap~on tools, and I have some that need warrantied, but NO dealer. That is just a PITA.
It is also why I recommended getting the impact sockets, in general, off the truck. I have some Sears (have to be warrantied via the catalog only method), as well as some Sunex (not local), etc.

dealers give a 10% because our markups are not high... and they don't want to lose the business by sending them to buy online... i really dont care about losing a little business but gaining a lifetime customer to me is worth more =P
 

Merkava_4

Banned
Joined
Dec 26, 2007
Messages
14,518
Location
Clovis, CA.
I'm getting the impression that it's crowded as hell in London; the only place where guys can set up shop is in an underground parking garage. :wtf:
 

Frank Elson

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 12, 2008
Messages
1,375
Location
Lancashire, UK
I used to have to work two days a fortnight in London, 20+ years ago and I hated the crowds and slow moving traffic then.
I have every sympathy with anyone who has to live there today.
 

olds88

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2008
Messages
466
Location
New York, NY
apparrantly your Dad gives you everything

He gave me some incomplete sets of 1/4 and 3/8 inch shallow sockets and 3/8 inch deep metric.... all my other 1/4 inch and 3/8 inch chrome sockets (i have complete sets 1/4 and 3/8, shallow and deep, SAE and metric), I bought new off the truck.

My 3/8 ratchets all came from eBay, screwdrivers are a mix of new and ebay, Dad gave me some plyers.... a MT2500 Scanner, a 1/2 inch torque wrench...... 1/4 ratchet, 1/2 ratchet, 3/8 speeder, and some other odds and ends. Between eBay and the Snap-on truck I've spend about $2000 of my own money. So no, Dad didn't give me "everything".
 
Last edited:

billymade

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 2, 2008
Messages
7,461
Location
New Mexico
speed bump, you really should do some testing of different brands of wrenches if you are willing to do so; we all seem to have our favorite brands on this board but do not have a definitive way to test which ones would be superior. Testing would seemingly be able to be done in relation to strength; ergonomics, shape etc. would probably hard to "define" as compared to pushing something to the point it breaks! If you are willing; I think this would be a huge contribution to this board and the continual arguing and debating that goes on here.... we could get some results that would give us some answers....
 

Thumper

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2005
Messages
2,209
Location
N.E.Ga
He gave me some incomplete sets of 1/4 and 3/8 inch shallow sockets and 3/8 inch deep metric.... all my other 1/4 inch and 3/8 inch chrome sockets (i have complete sets 1/4 and 3/8, shallow and deep, SAE and metric), I bought new off the truck.

My 3/8 ratchets all came from eBay, screwdrivers are a mix of new and ebay, Dad gave me some plyers.... a MT2500 Scanner, a 1/2 inch torque wrench...... 1/4 ratchet, 1/2 ratchet, 3/8 speeder, and some other odds and ends. Between eBay and the Snap-on truck I've spend about $2000 of my own money. So no, Dad didn't give me "everything".

Well then,,,I stand corrected. My sincere apologies. :wtf:
 

wantedabiggergarage

Member Emeritus
Joined
Feb 25, 2006
Messages
3,897
Location
Independence, MO, USA.
I prefer snap on wrenches,sockets,ratchets and torque wrenches do I have other brands -sure Mac (from 10 yrs ago or so,new stuff is junk),Wiha,Wera,Starret,Proto,Armstrong,craftsmen,cornwell and others.As long as it's American or German it's usually pretty good,would not buy ANY china ****!!

You might want to look up Stanley toolworks and Mac and the FTC fines/lawsuits. They have been hit multiple times for where their tools were made verses where they were said to have been made (including 10 years ago). I believe it has been about 13 years since the whole Huskey tools with the American flag, being delievered in a product of R.O.C. boxes.
 

speed bump

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
6,317
Location
Butte Montana
speed bump, you really should do some testing of different brands of wrenches if you are willing to do so; we all seem to have our favorite brands on this board but do not have a definitive way to test which ones would be superior. Testing would seemingly be able to be done in relation to strength; ergonomics, shape etc. would probably hard to "define" as compared to pushing something to the point it breaks! If you are willing; I think this would be a huge contribution to this board and the continual arguing and debating that goes on here.... we could get some results that would give us some answers....

On wednesday if I have time in lab i'll try and pull a Wrench and see if I can get enough purchase without cutting off the box end to pull wrenches in the Tinius-Olsen. If I can get it to work properly sometime during the school year i'll beat as many of them as I can and take pictures and videos and once I finish off the school year calculate all the pertinate information relating to metal strength.

I figured I would pull a SO, a Craftsman, a Proto and maybe some other things depending on what I could find and how much time I have. Also before I pull em i'll run em through the Rockwell machine.

Unfortunetly none of those tests will really prove anything other than maybe forging quality.
 

wrenhandtools

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
430
Location
Spokane, WA
economically speaking, the price of most tools available doesn't even remotely come close to making sense with what any tech will be making per year. The tool does not make a good tech, it is what the tech does with the tools. Don't get me wrong, you need very high quality and the lifetime warranty but it will save you tens of thousands in prices and possible interest paid in unnecessary loans if you do your research as to what's available out there. Don't fall into the 19th Century trap of just blindly paying for a brand name and not knowing exactly what you're getting.
 

olds88

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2008
Messages
466
Location
New York, NY
economically speaking, the price of most tools available doesn't even remotely come close to making sense with what any tech will be making per year. The tool does not make a good tech, it is what the tech does with the tools. Don't get me wrong, you need very high quality and the lifetime warranty but it will save you tens of thousands in prices and possible interest paid in unnecessary loans if you do your research as to what's available out there. Don't fall into the 19th Century trap of just blindly paying for a brand name and not knowing exactly what you're getting.

After my father closed his business in New York and sold his building, he worked for the Limo company that bought his building, in his old building for a short time before he moved to Florida. During that time he worked out of a Craftsman general service set (that I now keep in my trunk). He noted that simply from using the cheaper tools, at the end of the day he felt considerably more fatigued than using Snap-on tools all day.

To me, high quality tools are worth every penny.
 

eschoendorff

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2005
Messages
8,991
Location
Michigan
dealers give a 10% because our markups are not high... and they don't want to lose the business by sending them to buy online... i really dont care about losing a little business but gaining a lifetime customer to me is worth more =P

You sound a lot like our local dealer here. That's why everyone loves him. I am betting that you are fairly successful in your business :beer::beer::beer:
 

nissan_crawler

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2008
Messages
9,638
Location
Wichita, KS
nissan-I have a great dealer but not as great as Ann I guess how did you score that?

She was offering 25% off on the 3/8" stuff to make room for the f80's. I told her if she knocked 25% off the 1/4" I would buy both. She then round up to the nearest multiple of $5 for the discount. One came to $22 at 25%, so she knocked off $25.:bounce:

I wanted f80's...but just one cost the same as both of these with the additional green grips.
 

billymade

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 2, 2008
Messages
7,461
Location
New Mexico
Uhh, if your a Channellock dealer you should confirm this and introduce yourself; spam may not be the best intro on this site!
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom