This thread brings back memories for me of my days in the automotive repair business. Back then, a mechanics tools were his ego. The big three were Snap On, Mac, and Cornwell. As a store owner, I used to cringe when those trucks showed up because nothing got done until those "candy stores" left.
Some of those tool boxes got fancy right along with the price! Had an older mechanic all the younsters called "gramps". He used a modest Craftsman set with a modest looking Craftsman box and roll away. He got kidded alot about his tools. But, on payday he always walked out the door with a fat check while the younsters were out there paying off the tool trucks!
IPlayFarmer:
One trick to custom rims where a standard socket doesn't fit is to use a 3/8 (sometimes 1/2) inch drive spark plug sockett.
Doing this for a living I have a bunch of sockets for lugs, sometimes my 3/8 sparkplug socket fits best
For those who don't already know it, the trucks are literally, as well as figuratively, "candy stores".They usually keep a big bowl (fish bowl) full of candy for the customers to help themselves. And of course the candy bowl is kept at the very back of the truck, so the customers have to walk all the way through that portable showroom to get to the candy.
And yep, part of the reason for the big, fancy toolboxes is braggin' rights, but most shops are a little different than the one described above. If you go into a shop with your car, and you see two mechanics there; one with a modest Craftsman toolbox and one with a big fancy Snap-On, MAC, Cornwell, or Matco toolbox which one are you most likely to want to work on your vehicle? Subconsciously at least, most people will assume the guy with the big professional looking equipment is the better mechanic. And most of the time (but certainly not all the time), they'll be right.
Recently I saw some newly-made lower priced Chinese tools and the fit and finish was excellent. The tools seemed to be excellent --and I mean excellent quality--nearly equal in appeariance to my SnapOn stuff. I read somewhere that the Japanese were supplying the metal.