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Craftsman Ratchet Question.

Scout Driver

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Nov 20, 2009
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Small question about a small part. While doing a cleaning/lubing job on my ratchet, the small ball that is between the spring and pawl "vanished". :mad::mad:

Anyone know the size of the ball? Ratchet in question is a Craftsman 3/8" drive -V- 43785. Thanks. :beer:

Scott
 
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BanjoSavesTheDay

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Aaahh I don't know the size of the ball, but I feel your pain. I just cleaned a similar ratchet and came very very close to doing the same thing.
 

woody 73

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I too do not know the size of the ball,but I also feel your pain! One trick I did learn might help you in the future is this;(I put a lot of grease on the spring and the ball,the grease acts like glue,just long enough for me to get everythong back together).

I have lost enough little parts through the years,so I feel your agony.

Good luck in your search.
 

mkdive

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I bet if you go into your local sears, they would give you one free if not the entire rebuild kit. Mine gives me rebuild kits for free when I ask.

22a.jpg
 

bonneyman

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I was just taking a new Craftsman acquisition apart - a 1/4" 43175 "B" ratchet. But the thing was so stuck with old/dirty grease I had to wrestle to get the ball and spring out of the hole!
I save ball bearings from bikes as I find them. Keep them catagorized by size in little bins - you never know when you're going to need one. I'd be willing to bet one would fit.
The springs are much harder to match. I collect springs from old ball point pens in a little bin for just that reason.
 

SCscoutguy

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I bet if you go into your local sears, they would give you one free if not the entire rebuild kit. Mine gives me rebuild kits for free when I ask.

22a.jpg

Will they give you rebuild kits for the older V series ratchets as well or just the new tear drop kind?
 
OP
S

Scout Driver

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---Status Update---

Someone had a ball bearing in their "stash" today that was a match! With the help of a heavily modified curly-fry cutter made into a "ball bearing pusher-downer apparatus", I got the ball in and the ratchet clicks like new! :thumbup:

Thanks to everyone who posted with words of wisdom and hope! :beer:

Scott
 

phi2039

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Oct 30, 2008
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Baltimore, MD
If there is enough interest, I would be happy to post a video of the 'insider secret' to getting those little buggers put back together... No modified curly-fry cutter required :)
 
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Bigpigdave

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Camden, IN
If there is enough interest, I would be happy to post a video of the 'insider secret' to getting those little buggers put back together... No modified curly-fry cutter required :)

Please post the video, I am always open to learning.

Thanks
 

bonneyman

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If there is enough interest, I would be happy to post a video of the 'insider secret' to getting those little buggers put back together... No modified curly-fry cutter required :)

If it's one of the older "oiler" port styles of ratchet, you can hold the ball down with a drill bit thru the oiler hole as you push in the pawl. The newer styles don't have that hole - it's takes a bit of finesse!
 

BeninTucson

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Apr 14, 2014
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Tucson, Arizona, USA
Just rebuilt my 43785 . . . and, yes, the little ball bearing went flying, but was eventually found after cleaning the work floor with magnet and flashlight in hand. Exactly the same thing happened last month when I restored a recently purchased Challenger 10601 (you'd think I'd learn by now.) :dunno:

Anyway . . . I measured the ball bearing while I had everything apart and degreased. It appears to be 1/8" (or 0.125",) but my calipers were telling me it was actually closer to 0.135".

Cleaning hint: I keep a bottle of B100 biodiesel (not to be confused with petroleum diesel) around the shop for metal cleansing. This corn oil product does a great job of cutting through rust and removing decades-old grease muck. It also is easier on the nose and hands than ATF or WD40.

When reassembling, it's time for the white lithium grease . . . especially a dab to keep the ball/spring assembly together. A small flat blade screwdriver is the only tool I needed there and needle nose plier for the spring clips. I also spread a layer of grease around the gears. Once everything is back together, I clip on a large socket, hold onto it and spin the wrench handle around quickly like a party noisemaker in both directions for a few minutes to spread the grease around. Now, this old ratchet feels as smooth as the day I bought it (or my father bought it for me) some 4 decades ago.

Ben in Tucson
 
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