I am about to pull and replace the motor on my Alfa for the second time this month. To make this unfortunate re-do a bit easier on myself I would love the thinnest / shortest metric sockets available. Typical range for tight access connections is 10-17mm. 1/4in and or 3/8in drive. I usually like Euro/German brands but open minded for quality stuff.
There's a reason most professional mechanics prefer Snap-On. They made some of the thinnest wall sockets the last time I looked. There is at LEAST a half, maybe 3/4's of a gazillion hand tool makers, now a days, and somebody may make thinner, better sockets, but it's why I spent the money on them when I was workin' flat rate.
Snap-On tools made me money, every time I invested in them. I bought mine in the late '70's and '80's, but I haven't heard of anything better. It's those Blue Point tools, you gotta watch out for... LOL
A word from someone who's worked on just about every brand of Italian car there's been, AND loves old Fiats, ('70's area were mini-Ferrari of their day). They're what got the USSR to buy the rights to the 124, rename it, and make the same model for a bunch of years, it was a great car for them, THEN they 'upgraded' and bought the rights to make the 'Strada', I think it was called, a FWD turd).
The had tube headers, 4 wheel IRS and disks, Weber two barrel on a hot push rod 4 cyl and rack and pinion. My first wife loved the little 4 door sedan I got for her. She literally drove the wheels off it; well, the front suspension, anyway. They were a uni-body, no frame, and the front suspension was held on with four bolts. We lived in a house with a driveway that dropped at about 20-30° from the sidewalk, down to the garage and shop about 40' away. The street we lived on had a big crown for a city street.
It was fairly busy street, so she'd back out, kinda quick, as habit. One day, she was going somewhere & I heard the whine of reverse, then a funny sounding metallic crunch; not a collision sound, but definitely metal being damaged. Backing up quickly, the front wheels crossed the sidewalk, dropped into the driveway cutout, then hit the big crown of the street.
When I got outside to see what had happened, the Fiat was crosswise in the near lane, and the front suspension was still on the driveway cutout. The sudden stress from the reverse of the pavement angles ripped the front suspension right out of the uni-body.
THAT one, I couldn't fix. LOL
The word: You're working on an Italian car, nothing you do, nor tools you buy will make it easier to work on. Just doesn't happen... LOL
GeoD
PS
Keep some cheap 6 point sockets around, if the sockets you have are not thin wall enough, stick a 3/8" socket hex drive in your hand drill, and head for the nearest belt sander. (Use the area between the flat platen and the roller; the belt will depress a bit, give you a curved abrasive surface and let you 'turn' something down nice and even. Run the drill rotation against the direction of the belt to rough it, then reverse to 'finish' it smooth.)
I'm serious. Most of the tools which have saved me the most time/made things easier, are ones I've made/modified, myself. I still have some I made 50+ years ago.