![]() ![]() I have a bunch of Snap-On stuff, but I don't have much use for their tool guys anymore. Ever try to pick up a chrome ratchet with oily hands?īut if you think Snap-on is expensive. To make the point they don't chrome everthing, they plate it all with a rough silver surface. And the standard tools they sell are second to none. They build all the special tools for Vw/Audi, Porsche, Benz, BMW, ect. question, Ebay can be a steal on some of this stuff but you have to know what you are looking at, and be patient for the right deal to come along.Īnd by the way, Snap-On is not the best. Of all the things for my first post to be about, the mechanic chimes in on tools. Would cost me $7000 to get one this big in a name brand. $750 and easily as nice as all the big dogs. ![]() Then I moved to the pacific northwest and discovered Costco and the deal of the century on the chinese made stainless steel one they sell. Now I did have a big $4500 Snap-On box a few years ago, but lost it in hurricane Katrina. I have a $25 model from H-Freight, but I can set a transmission on it and not wince, they all have a fit if they drop a brake rotor into theirs. The little service carts that we all have to roll around with us as we work? the snap-on model is $500 and up, I think the cheapest "real" one is Matco and it is $450. And they go much higher if you want the REALLY big ones. Most of the guys in my shop have spent around $4-6000 on the box and we have a couple who have $10-14k models. Having said all that, it is VERY expensive to get a decent set of tools if it is all brand name. ![]() If you hold one up to the other, you can see it. Snap on sockets are machined to a tighter tolerance and fit the nuts better, but you have to use tham allot before you can really tell. And yes when you use tham all day long, there is a difference in quality, and fit. I had a decent set of mostly craftsman tools when I started 6 years ago and little by little it has all moved back home and been replaced by snap-on/Matco/Mac depending on who had what on sale. I am a pro wrench and "most" of my tools are now snap-on. It really comes down to how much you are going to be using it.
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