First of all, I'm not trying to start anything with this. I'm sure some of you guys have really strong opinions about this, and I'm sure it's been asked before. But I'd really like to know, from you who own and love them, why Snap-On?
I'm a 23-year-old gearhead. I don't have enough cash to afford nice tools most of the time, so I think I'm pretty good at making do with ****. I've never owned Snap-On, I have mostly Craftsman and Harbor Freight junk. I work on cars for a hobby, and I'm a machinist-in-training. So I know my perspective is very different from you lucky guys who work on cars for a living. But here's what I think:
As far as quality goes, I've used Snap-On once or twice, and you don't have to tell me the quality is awesome. I know it's there, and when people say they don't break, I believe it. But then again Craftsman (for example) has a lifetime warranty, so why does that matter?
As far as effectiveness goes, isn't a wrench a wrench? With the relatively common hand tools, do they do the job any better than others?
As far as price/availability goes, I just don't get it. I've looked at their website, and the prices are...staggering. $400 for a 3/8" socket set. $15,000 for a roll cab. (I could build a garage for the cost of some of their toolboxes!) $1500 for a set of wrenches. Are the prices cheaper when you buy them off the truck? Do you haggle or get a discount? Do they let you buy on credit or something?
I'm a 23-year-old gearhead. I don't have enough cash to afford nice tools most of the time, so I think I'm pretty good at making do with ****. I've never owned Snap-On, I have mostly Craftsman and Harbor Freight junk. I work on cars for a hobby, and I'm a machinist-in-training. So I know my perspective is very different from you lucky guys who work on cars for a living. But here's what I think:
As far as quality goes, I've used Snap-On once or twice, and you don't have to tell me the quality is awesome. I know it's there, and when people say they don't break, I believe it. But then again Craftsman (for example) has a lifetime warranty, so why does that matter?
As far as effectiveness goes, isn't a wrench a wrench? With the relatively common hand tools, do they do the job any better than others?
As far as price/availability goes, I just don't get it. I've looked at their website, and the prices are...staggering. $400 for a 3/8" socket set. $15,000 for a roll cab. (I could build a garage for the cost of some of their toolboxes!) $1500 for a set of wrenches. Are the prices cheaper when you buy them off the truck? Do you haggle or get a discount? Do they let you buy on credit or something?
so I bought SK 1/4 and 3/8 sets to keep on my truck (and I still stand by that decision today SK is excellent stuff). At home I have a body shop that I mainly do restoration work or light customization and have gotten into a position where I wanted to start upgrading some of my tools. There is nothing wrong with my Craftsman sockets so I am keeping those for now but I did start upgrading my ratchets around last year to SO Dual 80s and do not regret it at all (the Performance Tool brand is still there though 


