So who still makes great tool boxes?It's not bad at all. Call up MSC and they can get one for you. Not sure about the price but if it's very much I would skip. Kennedy boxes aren't that great anymore compared to the competition.
Snap-on... if you want to pay big bucks. But I preferred to put money into tools vs the box. Bought most tool boxes in pawn shops cheap. Even found some free tools under bottom draw. However, once I consolidated all my tools boxes after I retired, bought several Harbor Freight ones and found them to be a good deal.So who still makes great tool boxes?
Yes, to Stanley/Black n Decker who also own Portor Cable, Bostitch, and Dewalt. I hope the quality/warranty stays in the brand as they become more available in big box stores.Didn’t they sell off the Craftsman brand?
So who still makes great tool boxes?
FYI: while I didn't mod my current HF boxes, I installed metal tabs on top/bottom of all my previous boxes and ran rod/strap through tabs blocking the drawers and secured with high end padlock. Most OEM locks can be defeated very easily or are difficult to work as you mentioned.My only complaint is that the lock on it doesn't work very well,
FYI: while I didn't mod my current HF boxes, I installed metal tabs on top/bottom of all my previous boxes and ran rod/strap through tabs blocking the drawers and secured with high end padlock. Most OEM locks can be defeated very easily or are difficult to work as you mentioned.
In that case, a 9v battery, transistor, couple resisters, step up transformer, rubber pad, and a couple wires should do the trick.Keep the honest people out
I've never understood the appeal of spending $2.5k on a toolbox just to get a Snapon logo on it. My $500 Craftsman box is 10 years old, and is in exactly the same condition (Like new and functioning perfectly) that any Snapon box I could've bought would have been in at this point. Snapon tools? Sure. I get it, they're that good. But their toolboxes cost 5x as much and for life of me, I don't see any way to bring 5x more value or quality to what you get in a Craftsman box.
I've never understood the appeal of spending $2.5k on a toolbox just to get a Snapon logo on it. My $500 Craftsman box is 10 years old, and is in exactly the same condition
Nice.
That's what I have also. Pushing 10 years with mine, it's loaded to the gills...heavy stuff...including huge wrench & socket sets for dump trucks and tractors and backhoes, etc., and it handles it just fine. Regarding the lock, I never lock mine so I wouldn't know.I have a Harbor Freight ("US General") toolbox. It was something around $300-350 for a brand new one, 48", I want to say 13 drawers. My wife bought it for me because it had good reviews on Garage Journal (actually a really good place to look for info on garage stuff). I've had it for about 5 years at this point and I'm very happy with it. My only complaint is that the lock on it doesn't work very well, specifically you can lock it but then it's hard to unlock, so I don't lock it. This creates a bit of an issue since my kids will go rummaging through it at times, but they're mostly over that now.
That's what I have also. Pushing 10 years with mine, it's loaded to the gills...heavy stuff...including huge wrench & socket sets for dump trucks and tractors and backhoes, etc., and it handles it just fine. Regarding the lock, I never lock mine so I wouldn't know.
Need is a strong word. No one needs a $5k toolbox.Yeah, for most weekend warriors it is a luxury but there are plenty of high end shops that need that.
Note on the Harbor Freight toolboxes. The Red ones and the Black ones are built differently, not just painted differently.
I have one of the red ones that has proper rollers on the drawers and has held up very well. I am not a mechanic by trade, but I am in and out of it a lot.
Depends on who's paying.Need is a strong word. No one needs a $5k toolbox.
Good point. I stand corrected.Depends on who's paying.
I know a guy that has one of the trucks, not Snap On. He has sold 15-25k tool boxes. All custom of course, and on credit..
I'm sure the musings of PT Barnum are appropriate
box and say out loud '3/8 drive 5/16 deep socket with 6" extension' and have a gloved robotic hand open the draws, retrieve the tools, clean them and then hand them to me, it ain't worth the price Snapon is asking.
Didn't know that but mine's red also.Note on the Harbor Freight toolboxes. The Red ones and the Black ones are built differently, not just painted differently.
I have one of the red ones that has proper rollers on the drawers and has held up very well. I am not a mechanic by trade, but I am in and out of it a lot.
I have a large rolling one in my garage with another chest on top (it keeps my tools organized and in one place). I have a canvas tool bag that I throw what I need in, when I am mobile. When I get back to the garage, I put my tools back in the toolbox. So far, this has worked out great, because I would not want to haul all my tools around everywhere, just the ones I need for a particular task.I don't get the larger, rollaround tool boxes.
Most of my hand tools are in portable tool boxes because I am either in the hangar, in the garage, at work, in the field (really, the pasture). Ie very mobile. If they were in a truck-bed toolbox, I'd be doing miles carrying tools to and from the truck.
Also I can pack the important ones in one of these boxes, in the airplane.
Do you guys have rollarounds and a duplicate set of tools at each location?
Do you guys have rollarounds and a duplicate set of tools at each location?