WhiffySpark
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2009
- Messages
- 6,252
No interest on truck credit
I buy Hazet, Stahlwille, and Gedore new.
How can I buy hazet? Does he come to my shop right after the snap on guy and I just miss him everytime?
I have a SO charge account. Good credit does wonders.
Yeah, it puts you perpetually in debt.
Credit is evil.
Indeed. LOVE my F80 and TLL72 ratchets! FHLF80 ain't no slouch either.![]()
And here is the gist of it. It boils down to convenience mixed with a little bit of laziness. There are better values on hand tools out there, there are better hand tools. But the tool trucks are nothing more than the mechanic's heroin dealer and he has them hooked. Too bad they are too doped up to see what is happening to them.
Yeah, it puts you perpetually in debt.
The GF80 is my baby. I reach for that thing every single time pretty much! So smooth..only thing I wish is that it had less back drag. It has more than my old coarse tooth Craftsman.
Does anyone know if a 3/8" Dual-80 with recessed selector lever exists? Hard handle?
I throw the BS flag on that. You can change QA procedures, but any product that rolls of a production line is the same as any other. Putting it in a red box instead of a yellow is not going to change its quality.
Out of curiosity what is the going interest rate for Snappy corp credit and truck credit? I imagine truck credit varies widely by driver.
My F80 is pretty much my "go-to" for a 3/8 non-flex head. However, I find myself reaching more often recently for my Carlyle R38TD - lower back drag, about the same size, and seems to be just as tough. I don't notice the difference between the Snap On's 80 tooth mechanism and the Carlyle's 72 tooth. At a little over $20, the Carlyle really holds its own.
Nothing stops him from buying at Harbor Freight, anything he chooses, except the dismal quality comparison to his Snap-On tools.
Snap on is a fortune 500 company with an iron clad reputation.From what the guys are saying about the HF Pro wrenches, not so much. I think SO is going to be hurting in the coming years. The HF store in my area is smack dab in the middle of auto dealer row in my town (no coincidence). I always see a line of pros there when I go on my lunch break. As dealers get squeezed and are unable to pay better salaries mechanics are going to have to balance their own budgets.
Young mechanics especially are going to find it easier to resist the pull of the trucks and then SO is done.
I could get a guy to deliver Big Mac's to me at my work off of a truck for ten bucks a pop. It doesn't mean they are worth it. But it would be damned convenient. OR, I could just get off of my *** on my lunch break and head to the McDonald's down the street and save a ton of money.
...I always see a line of pros there when I go on my lunch break...
And that is fine by me
From what the guys are saying about the HF Pro wrenches, not so much. I think SO is going to be hurting in the coming years. The HF store in my area is smack dab in the middle of auto dealer row in my town (no coincidence). I always see a line of pros there when I go on my lunch break. As dealers get squeezed and are unable to pay better salaries mechanics are going to have to balance their own budgets.
Young mechanics especially are going to find it easier to resist the pull of the trucks and then SO is done.
I could get a guy to deliver Big Mac's to me at my work off of a truck for ten bucks a pop. It doesn't mean they are worth it. But it would be damned convenient. OR, I could just get off of my *** on my lunch break and head to the McDonald's down the street and save a ton of money.
Snap on is a fortune 500 company with an iron clad reputation.
From what the guys are saying about the HF Pro wrenches, not so much. I think SO is going to be hurting in the coming years. The HF store in my area is smack dab in the middle of auto dealer row in my town (no coincidence). I always see a line of pros there when I go on my lunch break. As dealers get squeezed and are unable to pay better salaries mechanics are going to have to balance their own budgets.
Young mechanics especially are going to find it easier to resist the pull of the trucks and then SO is done.
The "young mechanic" that I would look to hire would have some idea of his limitations. One being.....he does not know what works best. How could he?
But your point is valid....I worked alongside an excellent young mechanic when I was wrenching on high-speed ferries. His go-to tools were all HF. He was a ******** HF guy. He made them work. Granted....he made alot of trips to HF, and we had shop PROTO for anything above 3/8ths. And I used my own, as much as he liked to try to hand me his colored HF sockets. HAH!
I liked the guy.....he was gifted. I didn't place much stock in his HF ramblings.....the truth was: he knew what worked at 27 years of age.
From what I have seen and learned....as good as he is he will learn to look for the tool that makes the job easier....or smoother....or whatever word you care to use.
Snap On usually does this.
Snap on is a fortune 500 company with an iron clad reputation.
I need nothing. Im a union millwright. Single. Low overhead. Im set lol

Snap On IS NOT a Fortune 500 company:
http://fortune.com/fortune500/2013/snap-on-incorporated-694/
Rank 694
And here is the gist of it. It boils down to convenience mixed with a little bit of laziness. There are better values on hand tools out there, there are better hand tools. But the tool trucks are nothing more than the mechanic's heroin dealer and he has them hooked. Too bad they are too doped up to see what is happening to them.
If you're tool sensitive, and you've already tried Snap-on tools, you'll begin to notice the shortcomings of other tool brands right away. But the keyword is how tool sensitive you are.

If you're tool sensitive, and you've already tried Snap-on tools, you'll begin to notice the shortcomings of other tool brands right away. But the keyword is how tool sensitive you are.
Dollar Tree is a Fortune 500 company. That means **** all to me, what a "powerhouse" a company is.