![]() So my thought is because it’s thicker, it doesn’t flex as much putting all the power to the fastener. Put the SK on, pulled hard and it loosened. I put a Snapon wrench on a 15/16 nut, pulled really hard, I could see the wrench flex and fail to loosen it. Snapon and Matco look exactly the same except for the markings. I compared SK, snapon, and Matco wrenches. And toolboxes, forget it.Ĭlick to expand.I too am a big SK fan, particularly their wrenches. Same with the SO ball joint press vs buying 7? OTC or Astro. I know the SO fans will say "free replacement warranty" but you could probably buy 10 sets of Sunex impact sockets for what SO charges for their equivalent set. If I used my tools for a living, I would have a few more things by SO, but for general tools like sockets, impact sockets, screwdrivers, etc, SO makes zero financial sense to me. The dealer and the financing cost is probably 50% of the list price. With SO you are paying for a high quality tool, but also the dealer service, the "free" financing, the (generally) no hassle warranty from your dealer. There is not enough metal in most tools to claim you are paying that much of a premium for a higher quality steel. If they cost what SK does, I'd have a lot of stuff by them because realistically, what SK sells for is about what SO should cost. Oh, and a few inch combo wrenches from my dad. I have SO metric flare nut wrenches, PH3050 air hammer, die grinder, 3" cutoff tool. ![]() ![]() Click to expand.I would love to have all Snap On tools. ![]()
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