Discuss Veto Pro Pac - Worth the Money? in the Electrical Tools and Products area at ElectriciansForums.net
Well worth the money. Had mine around a.year.now and they are so robust and well made. Been through all weather, dropped bashed etc and still going strong.My old Stanley Backpack has given up after 2 years. The zips broken, and no way of fixing it. I am now tempted to buy a Veto, but as there are so many I’m not sure which model to go for..
I also thought I would ask and see if anyone is selling one on here?
absolute ly brilliant. i recently bought the LC. should have done it years ago.
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Stanley Totes for peanuts are amazing from "TOOL STATION" . Vetos are over priced and it seems many buy them and then put them on ebay for some reason
I get the "open top" bit .But they are cheap and work fine. Toughbuild or whatever are amazing but very very poorly managed by the UK distributor
I've had Vetos for 12yrs cannot beat the quality/5yr warranty and being able to organise the tools like they do
XL 6 years daily use in Electrical work mostly industrial
Personally I've had over 25kg of tools in mine with no problem except I was lugging stuff I didn't use all the time it had more capacity than I needed so I filled it up with stuff I rarely used
I chose the XL because the sides fold and secure down when your working and can be closed up when moving around or if its raining or dusty
Last 6 years I've also used an MC and a MB meterbag as I changed job and didn't need hammers hacksaws etc all the time as it was more control wiring on machines so some smaller electrical/mechanical tools required and I wanted something that would fit in a suitcase for overseas jobs
Even though its smaller I carry 13kg of tools which if i had to replace tomorrow would cost around £1200 , therefore to me it makes sense to protect them properly.
I wouldn't aim for too big a bag as you might end up carrying stuff you never use, better to have more or less the most utilised items in the bag to hand and other stuff in the van
If I was to go back to general installation work I'd be looking at the LC or possibly even the smaller backpacks if on large sites.
Plenty of YouTube videos showing their capacity, I would say it depends on how much you really need to carry, how mobile that job is and what the environment is like
there's videos on the net, showing the various bags, and what they can carry.Have you considered Facom tool bags as an alternative?
NB: if you search for a specific model, you can find sites that show inside photos as well.
Seems like every youtube beggar is been given bags for free .
As an example here are the contents of my MC,
(Meters and voltage probes all live in the meterbag so it's just the hand tools pictured that go in the MC and meterbag clips on the side)
It's full but not rammed, most items are to hand but I do have to take some items out to access others sometimes
ebay is full of themThey do look like a good buy. Is anyone selling one?
Right now....use your money to buy good screwdrivers and cutters etc House them all in a stanley tote from toolfix . Gucci bags can come later
Screwfix have an 18" Fatmax tote bag on offer for £19.99. Won't carry everything, but would hold hand tools for a while at a very reasonable price.
https://www.NoLinkingToThis/p/stanley-fatmax-hard-base-tool-bag-18/76628
When you're ready and certain which Veto is best, they'll still be available to buy.
I think your right there Tel. The Veto although massive. I do think I would not even be able to fill it. Would be heavy when fully loaded, there is no getting away from it. I do think for £80 it is a good price. The Velocity is half price which is a good buy. It’s also as good as new.trouble with the veto is due to it's size, i can see it getting overloaded and too heavy to carry. the velocity look good, but similar price to veto. the rogue 6 for £80 is a good buy.
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