Forgive my ignorance but what is the significance of the different Snap-on colors? And do people swap these handles just for aesthetics or is there another reason. Most of my stuff is Craftsman so I don't know much about about SO. Thanks.
Tools are made for being used to fix stuff. Since I think tool collecting is an effeminate twist on tools, I also think anyone who believes there is anything to gain by getting petty colors on their handles doesn't even know what tools are anyway.
Simply Put: There is no real significance. They all do the same thing.
Cool, I was beginning to think that the colors represented different price points or something. Thanks for the replies.
Colour coding anything makes it easier when calling on someone with little or no experience to pass you something whilst under a vehicle.....and they look purty.![]()
And cars are made to move cargo or people from point A to point B but people do all sorts of stuff with them and to them that they were never designed for. I guess those people are fags (or effeminate as you cleverly put it) too?Tools are made for being used to fix stuff. Since I think tool collecting is an effeminate twist on tools, I also think anyone who believes there is anything to gain by getting petty colors on their handles doesn't even know what tools are anyway.
Can I come work at your shop? I have never had the luxury of a slave, er apprentice, to stand around and hand me the tools I need.

And cars are made to move cargo or people from point A to point B but people do all sorts of stuff with them and to them that they were never designed for. I guess those people are fags (or effeminate as you cleverly put it) too?
Pride and enjoyment of ownership, be it tools, cars, guns, fishing poles or what have you is not a bad thing. Just because it's not your thing doesn't make it "effeminate"
To answer the OP's question... for the amateur working in his private space the different colors mean little more then appealing to the owners taste. For the pro working in a large shop with other techs, different colors are sometimes selected so they can easily identify their tools from the other guys stuff. I've even read about some guys who have painted their tools pink, not only to make them easily to find and identify but also to make them less appealing to thieves but I guess Spawn would think those guys are queer too :tard:
A pocket book, er screwdriver, to match every pair of shoes you have? The only color your tools should be is grease stained.
Tool colors, a flock of die hard collectors ,plus a web-site like the GJ make for an E-Bay cocktail of delight for all sellers; Kind of like adding gasoline to the fire!
Kind of like:
Wow how many vises do you own?
Oh my gosh those little 4" crescent wrenches are so cute.
Snap-on baby and nothing else.
Ma bell all the way.
Plumb pebble finish to die for.
I have a friend who has one of the nicest, cleanest, most well equipped wood working shop in the United States. He never makes anything, not even a wood coaster. He wouldn’t know Oak from Walnut and doesn’t care.
His hobby is the shop itself and the tools within. His tools are laid in his Snap-On Tool Wagon with the precision of the table service at one of Queen Elizabeth’s banquets.
I used to laugh at him, until I grew older and came to realize they were his tools, purchased with his money and his time caring for them.
That’s what made him happy, and that’s worth more than disparaging someone because they like different color tool handles. Having drab tools does not make you more manly, it simply means you may lack imagination. Sort of like having the vary same thing for dinner everyday.
Dan the Web is Fantastic but at the same time it is a Curse, gone are the days of the quick in and out now anyone can type in a name and get a boat load of valuable information. What took me years of learning can be had in seconds and what people are looking for is out in the open for all to see.
Ouch, Woody. I fit squarely in several of the categories named above.
I collect vises because I like good quality American made products of yesterday. My 100 vises: maybe more, maybe less, depends on if you count my wood, drill press, mill, post and hand vises, I guess. I buy them from people who don't know what they have other than that it is worth more than its weight as scrap iron.
It won't be long before I will be turning them loose (along with a small mountain of other old tools) so that some young guy just hired in a shop, or older guy retired to his garage, can take pride that he is using every day a tool that is more than 50, 75 or even 100 years old, and works as good as the day it was made.
A 4-inch adjustable wrench easily fits in the pocket. My 5'-0" 110 lb. wife, who is indifferent to most tools, lights up at the sight of a "miniature" wrench, hammer or other tool that seems to be made just for her. I imagine youngsters would enjoy learning to use smaller tools that they properly handle, and tend to fit the gadgets and gizmos kids build and tear apart.
This wonderful forum is where I learned that Snap-on tools are among a LONG list of exceptional tools. We tend to admire what we cannot afford. You and others on GJ helped me realize that I really can afford high quality American tools, made by many manufacturers.
If by "Ma-Bell," you mean Bell System tools, I take a second look whenever I see them. I imagine Ma Bell did not want her boys climbing to the top of a utility pole with a pouch full of junk tools. If, on the other hand, you mean Ma Bell, aka Verizon, I couldn't agree with you more. That's why I severed the underground phone line running through my property with a backhoe. Now I'm stuck with cell phone only service.
Pebble Plumbs. We will just have to disagree on that one. I consider pebbles to be among the nicest architecturally designed mechanics tools ever made. Beauty, strength, quality, perfect for the purpose it was designed and engineered to fulfill. That this brand name has endured as a topic of daily discussion a 3/4 of a century after its demise is a tribute to this fine tool.
Colors? I remember when Ma Bell, herself, first came out with phones in various colors. It wasn't long before basic black disappeared from kitchens and desktops all across America. The color change opened American consumer eyes that choices are available. It would not be long before MCI rolled into the picture.
Collectors? They keep the value and quality of all tools higher. Because older, finer high quality USABLE American made tools are readily available and can compete on price, toolmakers who wish to survive must continue to improve their offerings.
And if it wasn't for the "collectors," many more wonderful tools would have been scrapped before everybody else realized what they gave up.
Dan
Indio, CA

Or maybe it is more like seeing a pantry full of food that is rotting while the masses are starving.
A most excellent post, Sir. I'm going to recommend to the rest of the committee that you be promoted to Senior Member immediately!
Beerman:
Thank you for your gracious comment. I was feeling bad again that I can't keep my big mouth shut. I have too little genuine knowledge and experience to qualify as a Senior Member. As a slow learner, I may never get there. I spent the last 30 years making a living talking and writing. I want to start DOING SOMETHING. At least in this forum I can read and write about doing something.
Dan
Or maybe it is more like seeing a pantry full of food that is rotting while the masses are starving.
I think the origional point was to have a brightly colored tool that stand out in a dark engine bay or poorly lit corner of the shop. Maybe to distuinguish your tools from everybodys else in the shop. Maybe it reflects your favorite teams colors, or just your favorite color. I tend to buy orange (go Vols) but I have a spattering of everything, it doesn't really matter.
BTW, I always viewed collecting behavior as a man thing. Trucks, cars, guns, tools, arrow heads, hunting trophies, zippo lighters, the list goes on. I don't know many women that collect anything, but all men I know seem to collect something.
My wifes purse and shoe collection begs to differ with you
Tools are made for being used to fix stuff. Since I think tool collecting is an effeminate twist on tools, I also think anyone who believes there is anything to gain by getting petty colors on their handles doesn't even know what tools are anyway.
Simply Put: There is no real significance. They all do the same thing.
Can I come work at your shop? I have never had the luxury of a slave, er apprentice, to stand around and hand me the tools I need.
A pocket book, er screwdriver, to match every pair of shoes you have? The only color your tools should be is grease stained.
Or maybe it is more like seeing a pantry full of food that is rotting while the masses are starving.
