Tony H said:
Question for Guy F
I have a IM6100 Snap-On Impact Gun. It appears to work fine, bought it second hand. Does the Snap-on trucks carry any indicator equipment to test and see if that Gun is up to spec.? I spent good money for this second hand tool because I wanted a gutsy Gun , just wondering if it's putting out all the torque it was designed to do.
The IM6100 is the first generation IM6500. Honestly, after looking at the Parts for these two guns, I don't know what the difference is.
Often times, the difference in models of guns is slight, some improvement made after doing a bunch of warranty work, etc. Sometimes, as in the new XT7100 gun (the new red one) there is a total re-design for better performance. For instance, on the new XT gun (and the MG 31) we actually went out to shops and tested air supply and pressures. What our engineers discovered is that the actual output at the end of a typical shop air hose is less than half of what most guys think it is -- so they designed a new gun to deal with that. The XT's operate at 4 cfm and 50 psi, delivering 700 foot-pounds of torque at that level. That's also usable power, not some super high RPM test in a lab that cannot be duplicated in the field on a real bolt! I've set that new gun against all the competition, no matter how powerful they are supposed to be, and it does its thing!
We don't carry any equipment that can actually test the guns on the truck. Generally, what I do as a dealer that also sells a lot of trade-in guns and such is run a batch of PB Blaster AIR TOOL CONDITIONER spray (PLEASE don't run the regular PB Blaster penetrating oil in your gun -- unless you REALLY want to send it in for rebuild! It tends to dissolve the vanes!) through the guns to get all the old gunk out of them, grease them (and change the oil if they are one of the guns with an oil reservoir) and use them somewhere to see if they perform up to capacity. Of course, that test is just by feel, but after you've used a few guns, you tend to get a pretty good feel for what they put out.
http://www.pbblaster.com/store/moreinfo.cfm?Product_ID=3
I also sell all the used guns and such on a week trial basis. If, when I return the next week the gun doesn't perform well, I just reverse the deal. Not all Snappy dealers do that, just so you know -- that is my thing -- and I do it because I'm at least as interested in being a man of integrity as in making money. I figure the two things go hand in hand...
I'd say that if the gun is working pretty well, just use it. You probably got a pretty good deal for what you paid for it compared to a new one. With Snap On, you can always send the gun back through the company service agency for a rebuild, even if you didn't purchase it new. Just ask your dealer for the flat rate cost to rebuild that gun. If you send it to one of our rebuild centers, they replace virtually all of the internal parts, making it a brand new gun for a set price -- generally about 1/3 to 1/2 of the cost of a totally new gun -- well worth it, as the gun is remanned.
Hope this helps...