I've never done so, but can't you just trim the spring a little to reduce back drag?
I've never done so, but can't you just trim the spring a little to reduce back drag?
I'm not sure I'd agree the 120XP is a "gimmick" any more than a Snap On dual pawl is a gimmick. I haven't seen or heard any extensive complaints about them not being robust.
There are a ton of solid ratchets on the market, and it comes down to personal preference a lot of the time, similar to screwdrivers. The small swing arc is going to be useful in certain situations, but the trade off is the larger head. Pick your poison.
I'll live with fewer clicks in a tight spot because it's just not useful often enough to live with backdrag you'll experience often.
I'm a bit awash in poison these days - the last year has seen a lot of new ratchets as I've been doing a lot more work lately around the house and especially on my cars - a great excuse for new tools! Anyway, my job is competitive analysis and technical marketing about things like engineering, quality and usability, and I tend to dive into things that interest me like this.
Net: I over-analyze things (at least it pays the bills) - apologies in advance for a mega-post.
I fundamentally reject any argument based on taking a brand-new product and having to mod it for behavior considered negative to most people, in this case backdrag. I find it really odd that some people say they have it and some don't in the same product. Maybe it's manufacturing variance, maybe people are using it in different ways where backdrag isn't a problem or maybe people don't always recognize it for what it is (I didn't as recently as a couple years ago). Possibly all of those things are in play. I have to think if the manufacturer noticed/knew you modified the tool to "fix" it, they'd void your warranty (at least for the mechanism). In reality that's highly unlikely, but it isn't like adding wheels or a upgraded suspension to a new car - it's more like grinding down the intake manifold that you feel is kinda wonky for most people from the factory (or something like that - it's an imperfect analogy). Good on ya if that makes it better for you, but that's not a reasonable/rational product to me. I'm going to judge it for how it comes out of the box.
Anyway, here's how this whole thing breaks down for me in Moby **** form. It's admittedly heavy on opinion and hopefully-informed speculation, so I'm not telling anyone they're wrong () or stupid. If you disagree, I'm 100% good with that. I'm a full believer in the 'different strokes' thing. So:![]()
It appears one of the marketing points these days is tooth count - 80, 84, 88, 90, 100, 120, 144, etc. It's one of those spec-driven arms race things that the average dude in a box store can grab on - more is better, right?? But in reality it's one of those things that seems to trade off on other things.
Both the 120XP and the Husky 144 both have the the snap-ring design that seems to result in a thinner mechanism, really thin/small pawls (the look nearly identical inside). The stacked/alternating pawl design seems to bring some backdrag along with it, though it seems like more teeth in general puts backdrag in the picture if you're not careful. I'm not an engineer, but it seems like the small amount of tooth-engaged surface area (whether from a small pawl with fine teeth or two alternating half-pawls) isn't enough mass to fight the movement of the gear and the result is backdrag (?). I'm thinking that's why Snap On went a completely different way with the Dual 80 - it's two full size, non-stacked pawls that are pretty beefy, so they have enough mass to engage/disengage the gear. (all of that is sorta-informed supposition on my part - happy if an engineer can explain if I'm missing something).
Add to that all the personal preference things (mechanism feel, handle shape, lever actuation, etc.) along with price, and it's a ball of mush.
For me, 80-90 teeth seems to be the reliable sweet spot for low swing arc with low back-drag and good feel. I'll live with fewer clicks in a tight spot because it's just not useful often enough to live with backdrag you'll experience often.
The variation in back drag is an interesting topic, especially as it relates to same-model ratchets. Since you're a testing expert I will try to give an engineering opinion...
The "lighter mechanism" theory doesn't really hold much weight with me (in one sense - I'll address an opposing possibility later). The purpose of a ratchet is to engage teeth in a particular direction at one time and spin past them in the other direction. The weight of the pawl (as designed) should make little difference in the back drag because 1) the pawl is forced into place with a spring and 2) the mechanism should be designed to disengage in a certain setting. It seems to me lubrication/friction would have more do with this, and having two pawls that rub against each other and more pawl teeth to overcome would cause more drag than a single setup. Only half of this would apply to a dual-80 ratchet since the pawls are not stacked. To test whether or not a heavy pawl makes a difference would be simple - test for back drag using the ratchet handle down, then use it handle up and see if there is a difference. If you notice a difference likely there is more drag with the handle up as you have gravity assisting the spring to keep the pawl engaged.
More likely, however, is that these ratchets are produced with less tolerance control. Variation in the spring coil or length means more ore less force on the pawls, it's very possible that a company like Apex has a wider tolerance range than a company like Snap-On, and due to their production volumes and prices they may change suppliers more frequently or have to re-do tooling more often. It could be that they have higher labor turnover meaning ratchets are lubricated differently. Maybe some get worse tolerance stack-ups than others. Lots of possibilities
i also don't buy the comment that the ratchet is faulty if it has more backdrag. it may not feel as nice but it isn't faulty. i ratchet with high backdrag in theory is as strong or stronger than one with low backdrag becuase it may engage the pawls and gears more solidly.
what some of us may be more guilty of is having as preference of how a ratchet should sound and or feel.
If backdrag is the phenomenon where the ratchet will actually work the fastener both ways (i.e. it isn't ratcheting...) under low-load (usually late in removal of the fastener), then I don't understand how it can't be considered a negative.
If I misunderstand what backdrag is, educate me.
....
I've only experienced "backdrag problem" once, when I was taking off a timing belt cover. A long 10mm bolt is hidden in an impossible place, which means I can't reach my hand there to do anything. The bolt is loose, well too loose, the ratchet was not ratcheting, just moving back and forth. I had to turn the extension little by little to get the bolt out.
Frankly, no ratchet would work in that situation. It prompted me to buy a 1/4" Ingersoll Rand cordless ratchet.
If backdrag is the phenomenon where the ratchet will actually work the fastener both ways (i.e. it isn't ratcheting...) under low-load (usually late in removal of the fastener), then I don't understand how it can't be considered a negative.
If I misunderstand what backdrag is, educate me.
There's definitely a human-factors/preference thing in stuff like this, but backdrag isn't part of that, at least at the point where it isn't allowing the ratchet to ratchet...
i think i didn't explain my thoughts very well. what i meant was that in say a group of ten ratchets(pick a brand, any brand) you may end up with one that has very little backdrag, one that has more and the rest fall somewhere in between those 2. i would guess any ratchet has several areas that affect backdrag. length and strength of spring, depth of spring location in the pawl and depth of spring location in the head or anvil depending on type of ratchet. the slightest variation of any of them can affect backdrag. throw in the effect of different types of lube and now you have lots of variables. one with a slightly more backdrag does not mean it is faulty.
then throw in the fact that backdrag is a matter of preference. what may seem like a lot of backdrag to one person isn't to another. some people think a dual 80 mechanism is the cats ***. i have one and no desire to have any more. doesn't make it a bad ratchet it just means i don't like it. some people don't like the single pawl armstrong 60 or 88 or matco and gear wrench versions which i like. doesn't make it a bad ratchet either. it's called preference.
use what ya like and at the end of the day if anyone tries to tell ya either one is junk.........well maybe you should question their motives.

I'm simply amazed that a 120XP ratchet merits three pages of discussion.![]()
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120XP is number 11 on Amazon's best sellers--> https://www.amazon.com/Best-Sellers-Home-Improvement-Socket-Wrenches/zgbs/hi/553424/
Only 2 ratchets before it on the list. Right behind the Amazon Basics set. I've never seen the 120XP... or the Amazon Basics ratchet.
Who bumped a 59 page topic about HF Icon today??![]()
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I'm simply amazed that a 120XP ratchet merits three pages of discussion.![]()
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