I had the Snap On one until someone stole it at work. I then bought the Craftsman one. Identical sets. They work good.
Just to clarify one thing here. The warranty on these sets is handled by who you bought them from (i.e. what name is on the label). You'll pay more for a Snap On set, but they have a lifetime warranty, whereas the one with other names on them do not.
I have two sets of Snap On rethreading dies (one NC, and one NF) that I've put to good use, as well as Snap On branded rethreading files (all of these are Lang/Kastar) and some General rethreading files too (not sure who makes these). I don't have the full set with the taps, but to be fair, I hardly have the occasion to use a rethreading tap anyway.
Having all this, if the damage is only to the first thread or two on a non-critical bolt, I'll usually just fix it with a triangle file.
It is quite easy to make your own rethreading tap. Take a hardened bolt, grade 8 or metric class 9 and cut some flutes with a cut off wheel. Done.
Exactly. And that's why I haven't really had the motivation to pick up the master set.
Making your own rethreading die however is not so easy, and the flutes do a great job at removing corrosion and debris.
Now that I think of it, I do have a sparkplug hole cleaner tap if that counts.