ez-duzit
Well-known member
We admire, adore, and want to possess and collect beauty (or what we find beautiful).
I cant believe it. 20 pages and still going. Don't people have anything better to do?
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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Yes I have! They ship fast and they stock alot too. But some items I am looking for are 2-4 week special order. It's impossible to stock every single thing, ya know? I guess this even goes for domestic brands as well.
Nice to know you will be my Hazet guy from today forward!![]()
I would really think that you guys would get tired of repeating the same old tired responses to these threads.
Apparently you don't...![]()
If you read these threads long enough, eventually someone posts something that makes it worthwhile.
For this particular thread, I think it's the recent post of the very effective wrench polishing. That looks nice. As with any polishing process, it is effectively removing material. I wonder how many polishing cycles it takes to get to the center of a snap on wrench.
I still read, and sometimes participate in this type of thread, but I'm beginning to wonder why. I buy snap on, but I also buy craftsman, gearwrench, armstrong, mayhew, multiple harbor freight brands, NAPA, etc. I don't think I can single out any one brand in my toolbox and get all butthurt about it (I am annoyed with the quality of the local truck service, but I've bought online for the same price and faster delivery, so what's to lose?). What is it I'm missing that makes me unable to do this?
Do Toyota mechanics tend to have a lot of KoKen and/or KTC tools?
I'm just waiting for the answer about making that Snap-On wrench shine. I have a few that could use a good clean up, but I'm always afraid I'll make them worse.
I'm just waiting for the answer about making that Snap-On wrench shine. I have a few that could use a good clean up, but I'm always afraid I'll make them worse.
X2, hurry up man
Because with tools, "holds value well", doesn't mean it gains value. It just means it depreciates less than other alternatives. If you're lucky, AND you sit on it for a decade, maybe you can sell it for 75% of the original investment. The investment value of these tools is NOT the residual value in them when I am done with them. The investment value of these tools is my worth as a professional mechanic, the return on that investment is the value of the work I am equipped to do because I own them.
A lot of my snap on tools were bought used on ebay/craigslist/etc. I typically buy it if I can get it for less than half of current list price. If that's somebody's investment I'm buying at 50% of common purchase price, well that kind of ***** for him.
Actually buying FOR resale as an investment is something done with appreciable commodities. Tools are depreciable commodities, snap on just happens to lose less than the others, and despite that, still isn't automatically the best choice. You can buy a snap on tool for $600, use it a few years, and hopefully sell it for $400, and have a net loss of $200. You can buy a harbor freight tool for $75 and throw it in the trash can when you're done, and be $125 in a better position than if you had spent for the tool that "holds value".

I would really think that you guys would get tired of repeating the same old tired responses to these threads.

You're not counting the fact that the tool has make you X amount of profit from using it so it's not a net loss at all.![]()
The investment value of these tools is my worth as a professional mechanic, the return on that investment is the value of the work I am equipped to do because I own them.
Tools don't make profit, just like spoons don't make people fat, pencils don't misspell words.

That is literally like trying to find a Needle in a Haystack, It doesnt happen very often, The Majority of the time the Mods need to babysit them till it gets to the point where they get closed.
Lets Not Forget.. Right Now there is a so-called 16 year old who started this thread probably just laughing his *** off at the back and forth. OH.. and here is a link to his recent thread. What is his Question Again? He seems to already know the Answer.. 10-1 This isn't the 1st time he has signed up for a Account here at GJ.
You make a good point, although in this case it's more like sitting back and watching the haystack unravel itself. It's not quality entertainment, but it's something else to do while simultaneously having a beer and watching the game. At least, that's what works for me.
As for the OP, who cares? After about the 20th post, it's rare that the thread is still about the OP anyway. By that point most threads usually have a life all there own and have gone where they will. When is the 5th or 10th page of a thread ever still on the same topic as post #1?
Threads like this are kind of like people watching, except you don't have to go to walmart to do itI've been reading a few of these in the frame of mind of attempting to understand the psychology of those who feel so strongly they must prove the value of their purchasing decisions, or must disprove the value of those who have chosen differently from them. If you take a step back and watch it all unfold, it is kind of fascinating (for a while).

there's this new thing called google. Have you heard of it?
I'm fairly certain I've literally seen "every possible argument" for or against a specific brand, I promise you... It will eventually get tiring.![]()
Yup, just like guns don't kill people.
He does bring up a good point though..I see soooo many guys justifying their Snap-On purchases with claims that the (Snap-On) tools make them money. I think that's ridiculous.
I see soooo many guys justifying their Snap-On purchases with claims that the (Snap-On) tools make them money. I think that's ridiculous.
You can make money with tools that are not from the tool trucks. Hell...you can make more money with them because you have less initial investment to repay.
All these same old justifications for truck brands are getting old and disproven. The only justification you need is "because I wanted them."
Please explain. My tools made me a lot of money over the years. If you work with tools and get paid because of it, those tools are making you money.
Now if your tool passion is hobby or polisher based then I could see your point. But I still wouldn't call a desire to have great tools ridiculous.
You can make money with tools that are not from the tool trucks. Hell...you can make more money with them because you have less initial investment to repay.
All these same old justifications for truck brands are getting old and disproven. The only justification you need is "because I wanted them."
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.
You can make money with tools that are not from the tool trucks. Hell...you can make more money with them because you have less initial investment to repay.

Tell that to the guy who's using cheap tools and rounding fasteners trying to do a job. But you don't want to hear that. Doesn't fit with your HF worship.![]()
Yup, just like guns don't kill people.![]()
My Snap-on tools make me money and save me time which makes me money.
But after 22 pages I am still waiting for somebody to tell me who makes better 1/4 flex sockets.
Plus if you do not want multiple people's opinion do not read this get off the internet and go read a book.
My wife's opinion is that it's more common to see college grads who have over $100k worth of education and are working at $50-90k/year careers. I was actually surprised by this. Blows me away.
To me, I'd say 50k to 90k is a hell of a good living.
College is the biggest scam currently going on in our country IMO. Their prices are ridiculous, and only going up! False promises of a steady career making $** per year or hour.
To me, I'd say 50k to 90k is a hell of a good living. If they are smart with their paychecks, they could pay off those 100k loans within 10 years. That means not buying a BMW/Mercedes, not going to Starbucks twice a day, buying a modest house, etc..
Not for 100K in school it isn't... Heck, 10K at a tech school will get you that.