andrewthesith
Member
i'll never buy Snap On. if i'm gonna pay that much money for hand tools, i want them made in America.. wrapped in gold.. and delivered to me by a naked woman.
Yes, there is intl. shipping, but not every sale offers this.
For the last month I have been looking at buying a Hazet something or other and no USA retailer stocked it. I did find a few on eBay in other Euro countries; all but one didn't offer intl. shipping. The one that did, shipping costed more than the item. :/
So, are all items "available" "everywhere"? "Yes". ;-)
$500 for 11 wobbles? come on man thats just ridiculous. they may make most of their stuff in america, but its still mass produced.
Yes, there is intl. shipping, but not every sale offers this.
For the last month I have been looking at buying a Hazet something or other and no USA retailer stocked it. I did find a few on eBay in other Euro countries; all but one didn't offer intl. shipping. The one that did, shipping costed more than the item. :/
So, are all items "available" "everywhere"? "Yes". ;-)
You do notice that NO ONE ever copies MAC, MATCO, or Cornwell tools. (I wonder why?) (NO name recognition perhaps)?
That's a good one!YES, THERE IS A DIFFERENCE, and YES, I DO DRINK THE KOOL-AID™

yes, without question
You can buy all Hazet items from me at reasonable prices and lowest shipping costs and as an authorized Hazet dealer (opposed to some other German Ebay "dealers") I honor Hazet's lifetime warranty for material and manufacturing defects.

Cool! Good to know... I just tried my hand at polishing.
Cool! Good to know... I just tried my hand at polishing. I thought I'd have to replace a bunch of them, but now I was able to get most of them from this..
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To this..
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I wish the snap on people would stop preaching about owning superior tools is the best investment for your money, and less things breaking earns you money money, and how it's cause of the connivence of having a tool truck.. Please... Just come out and say " because it's what I wanted" instead of trying to sell everyone else into owning a a weekly snap on payment for life.

I'm not a professional, but I can't see "investing money" into tools that a company still charges a 33% markup on even when they are being sold online instead of the tool truck.. Also not a fan of the tactics of targeting students that attend "for profit" schools, knowing that most will never wind up in the field. They target these kids with discounts, hoping to entice them to take out even more loans while they are in school since "they should buy as much as they can while they get the discount". Meanwhile, most never stay in the field, and just leave with even more debt to pay. Those that do likely get out of school and land the same job changing oil that they could have gotten right out of high school.
Yes the tools are good, but I can't see putting yourself into debt to try to make money in a "work for someone else" field. You can get the same job, and earn the same money weather your 10mm socket says snap on, gear wrench, craftsman or harbor freight.. In my mind, the best investment for you money is the one that earns you an immediate return on investment. How many oil changes have to be done to pay for that snap on tool kit as opposed to a craftsman one..
I wish the snap on people would stop preaching about owning superior tools is the best investment for your money, and less things breaking earns you money money, and how it's cause of the connivence of having a tool truck.. Please... Just come out and say " because it's what I wanted" instead of trying to sell everyone else into owning a a weekly snap on payment for life.

Well said.
Snap-On guys will never convince the rest of us that their tools are worth the cost. Buy 'em 'cause you like 'em. That's perfectly fine...SO makes great tools. But don't take it out on everyone else because your wallet hurts.
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Now I buy Snap-on to be cool and stylish![]()

Gee, aren't we hypocritical tonight... There is a new thread almost daily on how evil Snap On is and why no one should buy them. I have never seen a thread on why no one should buy HF, ever. I'm sure one exists if you dig through the archives but don't be throwing rocks when you live in a glass house.

Gee, aren't we hypocritical tonight... There is a new thread almost daily on how evil Snap On is and why no one should buy them. I have never seen a thread on why no one should buy HF, ever. I'm sure one exists if you dig through the archives but don't be throwing rocks when you live in a glass house.
I'm not a professional, but I can't see "investing money" into tools that a company still charges a 33% markup on even when they are being sold online instead of the tool truck.. Also not a fan of the tactics of targeting students that attend "for profit" schools, knowing that most will never wind up in the field. They target these kids with discounts, hoping to entice them to take out even more loans while they are in school since "they should buy as much as they can while they get the discount". Meanwhile, most never stay in the field, and just leave with even more debt to pay. Those that do likely get out of school and land the same job changing oil that they could have gotten right out of high school.
Yes the tools are good, but I can't see putting yourself into debt to try to make money in a "work for someone else" field. You can get the same job, and earn the same money weather your 10mm socket says snap on, gear wrench, craftsman or harbor freight.. In my mind, the best investment for you money is the one that earns you an immediate return on investment. How many oil changes have to be done to pay for that snap on tool kit as opposed to a craftsman one..
I wish the snap on people would stop preaching about owning superior tools is the best investment for your money, and less things breaking earns you money money, and how it's cause of the connivence of having a tool truck.. Please... Just come out and say " because it's what I wanted" instead of trying to sell everyone else into owning a a weekly snap on payment for life.
WOW that's amazing! What's your method?
Typical SO owner.
I can't see someone spending $150,000 dollars in student loans to get degrees in social work, to then make $45,000 a year in a social services government job. Happens everyday though. Do you have any problem with the government backing loans for just about every college in the country, even though only 50% of them finish their degrees, but 100% of the loans are still due? Isn't that a government tactic? Who benefits the most from that, other then the colleges that all say you need a degree to get anywhere in the country?
And as your first statement says, you are not a professionial tech. So you probably don't understand the difference between a "you get paid by the hours you flag" guy and the guy that gets paid the same if the job takes 2 hours or all day. For the pro tech, time is money. For the backyard hack to cheap to pay someone for a job "I could totally do", go get your Harbor Freight tools to change the spark plugs in your F-150. A pro will be there later to fix it after you break the plugs in the head and need a tool kit to get them out.
I guess the main thing that fires me up is all these "Shadetree Guys" that think most mechanics are just dumb hillbillies that don't know they are being duped into buying overpriced tools. Most of them are just as smart as you, and just as good with money as you are.
I can't see someone spending $150,000 dollars in student loans to get degrees in social work, to then make $45,000 a year in a social services government job. Happens everyday though. Do you have any problem with the government backing loans for just about every college in the country, even though only 50% of them finish their degrees, but 100% of the loans are still due? Isn't that a government tactic? Who benefits the most from that, other then the colleges that all say you need a degree to get anywhere in the country?
And as your first statement says, you are not a professionial tech. So you probably don't understand the difference between a "you get paid by the hours you flag" guy and the guy that gets paid the same if the job takes 2 hours or all day. For the pro tech, time is money. For the backyard hack to cheap to pay someone for a job "I could totally do", go get your Harbor Freight tools to change the spark plugs in your F-150. A pro will be there later to fix it after you break the plugs in the head and need a tool kit to get them out.
I guess the main thing that fires me up is all these "Shadetree Guys" that think most mechanics are just dumb hillbillies that don't know they are being duped into buying overpriced tools. Most of them are just as smart as you, and just as good with money as you are.
Because someone said something about any brand you use!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 
Do Toyota mechanics tend to have a lot of KoKen and/or KTC tools?This thread cracks me up, ridiculous. The 'pros' the shade trees', the blah, blah...
I am a professional mechanic, having the right ******** tool is what makes money. Could be Snap-on, don't have to be, DEPENDS! Specialty tools, power tools, hand tools.
Having the right tools, makes a pro money, and the brands are endless that can deliver 100% results. Snap-on is GREAT, but their prices are, well......... outrageous, and not better IN MOST CASES than the likes of other top brands. Some prefer it
so be it.
All this chest pounding about 'I'm a pro, blah.............. I work with pros. ALOT of the worst mechanics, that piss and moan, and look for gravy, and have the most come backs, have the largest truck tool collections. Not always but, the best tools are only PART OF THE EQUATION.
Buying 100% Snap-on is as ridiculous as buying 100% Harbor Freight. Variety and quality, having many tools, and the right tools, gets you somewhere. Buy what you NEED.
Some of the ******** cars I work on are such rusty, greasy ****, I don't want my best tools on them... LOL... A mechanic needs alot of tools.
In most cases mechanics are not paid enough, the whole flat rate deal works against the mechanic and the customer. That is a whole different discussion.
All you guys like thisBecause someone said something about any brand you use!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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WOW that's amazing! What's your method?
I can't see someone spending $150,000 dollars in student loans to get degrees in social work, to then make $45,000 a year in a social services government job. Happens everyday though. Do you have any problem with the government backing loans for just about every college in the country, even though only 50% of them finish their degrees, but 100% of the loans are still due? Isn't that a government tactic? Who benefits the most from that, other then the colleges that all say you need a degree to get anywhere in the country?
And as your first statement says, you are not a professionial tech. So you probably don't understand the difference between a "you get paid by the hours you flag" guy and the guy that gets paid the same if the job takes 2 hours or all day. For the pro tech, time is money. For the backyard hack to cheap to pay someone for a job "I could totally do", go get your Harbor Freight tools to change the spark plugs in your F-150. A pro will be there later to fix it after you break the plugs in the head and need a tool kit to get them out.
I guess the main thing that fires me up is all these "Shadetree Guys" that think most mechanics are just dumb hillbillies that don't know they are being duped into buying overpriced tools. Most of them are just as smart as you, and just as good with money as you are.
This thread cracks me up, ridiculous. The 'pros' the shade trees', the blah, blah...
I am a professional mechanic, having the right ******** tool is what makes money. Could be Snap-on, don't have to be, DEPENDS! Specialty tools, power tools, hand tools.
Having the right tools, makes a pro money, and the brands are endless that can deliver 100% results. Snap-on is GREAT, but their prices are, well......... outrageous, and not better IN MOST CASES than the likes of other top brands. Some prefer it
so be it.
All this chest pounding about 'I'm a pro, blah.............. I work with pros. ALOT of the worst mechanics, that piss and moan, and look for gravy, and have the most come backs, have the largest truck tool collections. Not always but, the best tools are only PART OF THE EQUATION.
Buying 100% Snap-on is as ridiculous as buying 100% Harbor Freight. Variety and quality, having many tools, and the right tools, gets you somewhere. Buy what you NEED.
Some of the ******** cars I work on are such rusty, greasy ****, I don't want my best tools on them... LOL... A mechanic needs alot of tools.
In most cases mechanics are not paid enough, the whole flat rate deal works against the mechanic and the customer. That is a whole different discussion.
All you guys like thisBecause someone said something about any brand you use!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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I know nothing about polishing..but I was able to have one of the machinists here at my shop help me out. I know that we used three different cotton wheels on a grinder and three different colored "sticks" of what I think was abrasive, or polish. I really only performed the last step and it was with green polish.
It's funny because while he was doing the first couple steps I thought he was ruining my tools. LOL! But yeah after using the green stuff (less abrasive?) the bling really came out and made me happy.
No wonder why Snap-On guys like shiny tools; there's the satisfaction of spending hours polishing them to look like new after they've taken a thorough beating! Who knows how long since my Snap-On set has seen a good polishing job. I'm happy with how they turned out.
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With that said though, I do hold a sense of pride having my set of Snap-On tools. My particular set of wrenches I just polished is from the 70's, and I'm proud to have them looking this good now. I would rather have this old set of wrenches that I put some elbow grease into than a brand new set off the truck.
Anyone can buy something off the truck. That's nothing to be proud of.
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"...In most cases mechanics are not paid enough…".
Only two occupational groups in this world make their living on their backs. And mechanics are the least-paid of the two.
This is awesome, great job. If you could get the details of the compounds and buffing wheels, along with some quick notes on the process on a new thread, I would be interested (I think some others would be also)
This is awesome, great job. If you could get the details of the compounds and buffing wheels, along with some quick notes on the process on a new thread, I would be interested (I think some others would be also)
Yeah that polishing job is completely new thread worthy. GET THE SECRET OUT!
I know you love it and whatever floats your boat but this has to be the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard of.
Do Toyota mechanics tend to have a lot of KoKen and/or KTC tools?
I would really think that you guys would get tired of repeating the same old tired responses to these threads. I expect it from the New guys, they don't know any better and still feel the need to bring something to the table. I'm beginning to think some of you know more about brand chest thumping versus actually using your tools.
As redundant as it sounds, it doesn't get any simpler than "buy whatever brand" fits your need/desires.