gdocktor3
Well-known member
Super lube grease is the standard included in Snap On and SK rebuild kits. It's my opinion that oil should only be used in sealed head ratchets, since it will leak out of round heads.
It's my opinion that oil should only be used in sealed head ratchets, since it will leak out of round heads.
You got it backwards. You don't want oil for sealed ratchets because it'll take forever to seep out. Grease is better for sealed ratchets.
Boy, this surprised me. All the talk about grease and all for ratchets as if they are high speed tools. Looong ago I was told not to use grease but just a bit of light oil. Reason being that using grease didn't st times allow the pawl or teeth to mesh properly and this resulted in the teeth getting stripped. Again as a mac tool dealer we were told to tell customers to use light oil. Many ratchets that I got with stripped teeth had grease in them. So I finally stopped warranting ratchets with stripped teeth if they had grease in them.
your tools but my ratchets used plain old thin oil and they worked just fine with no stripped teeth. Again, they are simple tools, not high speed that need all that grease clogging things up. Best is to clean them regularly and assemble with a drop or two of light oil like 3 in 1 and off you go.
RIGHT ANSWER.
Snap On ships rebuild kits with superlube. But if you open a new SO ratchet you will find very little grease and little to none on the gear teeth. The grease goes under the gear against the housing.
Boy, this surprised me. All the talk about grease and all for ratchets as if they are high speed tools. Looong ago I was told not to use grease but just a bit of light oil. Reason being that using grease didn't st times allow the pawl or teeth to mesh properly and this resulted in the teeth getting stripped. Again as a mac tool dealer we were told to tell customers to use light oil. Many ratchets that I got with stripped teeth had grease in them. So I finally stopped warranting ratchets with stripped teeth if they had grease in them.
your tools but my ratchets used plain old thin oil and they worked just fine with no stripped teeth. Again, they are simple tools, not high speed that need all that grease clogging things up. Best is to clean them regularly and assemble with a drop or two of light oil like 3 in 1 and off you go.
I use Marvel Mystery Oil.
On some of the older coarse-tooth designs (20-tooth Walden-Worcester #3150, old Penens 1/2" drive 1661, Walden-Worcester 1150) I put a tiny dab of white lithium grease on the gear teeth.
I think you'll find (if you read enough of these "What ratchet lube?" threads) that the guys using the "Super Lube" are more often than not using the newer "super fine tooth" designed ratchets. (Finest action I own is the 52-tooth Indestro RHFT models.)
I think it's just mineral oil with red dye.... not sure.
Can't speculate on any synthetic oils... sold a lot of it, but never used any.
another S-K for your collection. not bad if you can beat him down:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1-2-Drive-R...066564?hash=item360dc239c4:g:fhwAAOSwdIFXyx-E
After reflecting on it.... a while back somebody posted a photo here somewhere of a ratchet repair kit they had just received from the factory - can't recall if it was an S-K kit or not - and it contained a small plastic squeeze-pouch of what was determined to be that "Super Lube" product. Anybody remember that who might be able to dig it up? Was months ago... all I can recall now.

Aaaaand that's why I open up brand new ratchets, clean them, and then give them a fairly liberal dose of superlube all around.
My brother saw me opening up a brand new dual 80 and started having a fit saying there's no reason ever to open up that ratchet for at least a couple years. So I stopped, and showed him exactly why.
I clamped a new bolt in the vise and started by hand a new nut on it (9/16 or 5/8 or thereabouts). I put a deep socket on the ratchet and and tried to tighten the nut down on the bolt holding only the ratchet. No matter how hard I tried, it was impossible. There was no ratcheting going on. I was only moving the nut back and forth.
I then went back to disassembling and cleaning the guts of my new snap on ratchet in mineral spirits and then superlubed everything as I put it all back together. back to the same nut on same bolt, and this time I was easily able to turn that loose nut down and back up the bolt using the ratchet.
It's all about the back drag.
I keep all my ratchets like that all the time.
I disobeyed and put super lube in. But it's a big 24 inch long 45 tooth 3/4 drive. I think I'll be fine.Wright ratchets have "oil only" engraved on their ratchets.
I disobeyed and put super lube in. But it's a big 24 inch long 45 tooth 3/4 drive. I think I'll be fine.
it says right on my big ole wright 3/4 oil only.I was thinking it was just for their duel pawl ratchets. (you can tell there is a lot going on in the ratchet head when your using it)
The 1/4 drive isn't stamped...
Permatex is pretty good but the best is a small amount of Ky Jelly before each use. Try it and let me know what you thinkI use the Red Lube of Love (Permatex 81950) and I got it from Autozone or Advanced Auto parts. It kinda ***** because it will leak out of the ratchet for a while, but as a lube it works well. I'll keep using it because one bottle will do like a gazillion ratchets and I'm too cheap to just try something else.