ssdave said:
Some of the tools that I have in preference to, or equal to Snap-on are Proto, Indestro, Williams, and Mac.
kctyphoon said:
One thing I CAN tell you is that many people will gravitate towards what the people around them use. when your starting out in a trade and the more senior employees swear by certain brands, logically it would seem they have a lot more experience, so their recommendations shouldn't be ignored. Even if their brand of choice is a great product, that doesn't mean there aren't other options that will work just as well. Most people don't have the means (or desire) to buy the same exact tools in 10 different brands so they can use them all side by side and then split hairs as to why they like one more than another.
(emphasis added)
Something that is in play here in this conversation is the fact that not
one person commenting here has in fact used every brand of every different type of tool, a point which kctyphoon raises in his post cited just above.
ssdave obviously has tried more than one brand, and names a few viable options.
He also cites Indestro, which has been out of business since 1990.
I own very little Snap-on myself: a 1/4" drive ratchet and a set of 1/4" drive 12-point metric deep-well sockets is the extent of my Snap-on collection.
The Snap-on sockets are pretty nice, but I cannot make an apples-to-apples comparison between them and my Indestro 1/4" drive
6-point SAE deep-well sockets. Oddly a Craftsman 1/4" drive 12-point 5/16" deep-well I bought (because I couldn't find my Indestro) is surprisingly nice to work with, and it was about $5 five years ago (as opposed to $9.52 each for the Snap-on sockets about 20 years ago.)
I
much prefer my #2875 Indestro 1/4" drive round-head fine-tooth ratchets to the Snap-on - there is simply no comparison: the Indestro #2875 is a work of art.
As has been stated, brand loyalty is all fine and well, but when there are other options available they should be explored before simply being dismissed out of hand - pliers probably being the best example where Snap-on might possibly
not be the best choice in respect to "bang for the buck".
And in my mind, it makes no sense to pay a premium price for
any product simply because it has a particular brand name stamped on it when in fact it was sourced from another manufacturer and could be had from the primary source for far less money: i.e., Wilde pry-bars, Wilde punches, Wilde pliers, Proamerica pliers, Kastar feeler gauges, OTC pullers, etc. If Snap-on isn't actually
making the product, why pay them more for it when you can get it elsewhere for less?
Finally, don't forget to take a look at something which definitely comes into play here but nobody will admit to:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-purchase_rationalization