I am going to compliment you on your thread.I like how you ask questions and wait for response from some very talented and experienced guys here.
Thanks. I'm getting old enough, now, that I can be (a little!) patient, and have figured out that it is easier to learn from others' mistakes than your own
You do research on your options,before you spend.I have always questioned,and like you splurged on a Snap On ratchet,but I would never put a bar on it.A breaker is your best option.If I pull my ratchet out,I pull my breaker, people that break ratchets usually,not always are abusing them.My ratchet is important,I ask myself,if I abuse it,how do I get my work done till its repaired?
The funny thing is, I've had that Kobalt/Williams set for ~17 years, now, and went through 3 cheap breaker bars, always finishing the job by putting a bar on the 1/2" ratchet... which, unlike the cheap breaker bars, got the job done and always worked fine. Then my Dad lost it, and replaced it with a cheap POS from Ace Hardware that I never use, I put an adapter on the 3/8".
I've got a Pittsburgh breaker bar, now, that I've used several times, and it's holding up like a champ.
So that being said,ask yourself,is there one tool or tools,that are used often or break, that maybe a professional upgrade will be better in the long run.Inconvenience of a damaged tool,hurts you performance and your customers expectations.Sometimes spending a bit more will save the day.
I've actually been thinking about this.
The GF80 is fantastic; great action, medium back drag, but just smooth as silk. Perfect for a good, solid 3/8" ratchet that will be the most used, probably.
I'm looking at the 1/2" extendable ratchet from Harbor Freight for my main 1/2" driver, though; 72-teeth should be smooth enough, it's also a dual-pawl design just like Snap On's, and it combines the ratchet and a medium breaker bar into one tool. Since my 25" bar won't fit in my portable tool kit, this solves the problem and saves weight. I can always keep the big bar in the car and grab it if I really need it, and if I find myself accidentally breaking the ratchet, I'll buy 2 so I have a backup until I get the broken one warrantied, and still come out cheaper than a single SO ratchet
On the other side, I'm looking at the HF 1/4" flex head for that size. I can always put an adapter on the GF80 if I really need the smooth action, so I see no reason to buy the 1/4" and 1/2" versions when I can get some better options for a lot less money, and still have 90% of the same capability.
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A note on the GF80; I don't know what kind of "Industrial Finish" Snap On puts on their tools, but it is a sick joke, at least around here. Of course, where I live, the humidity is a physical thing
My tool kit hasn't left my temperature-controlled shop except to go out to turn a few bolts since I've had it, but if I leave it for a few days and come back, there will be a red dusting all over it, even if I oil it before putting it up.
At the same time, I don't want to hot blue or do anything like that to it; is there a better oil/protectant I can put on this thing, should I look into gun bluing it, OSPHO, or is it just how it is and I need to store it in an oil cloth or something?
The phosphate-coated gearwrench sockets aren't having this problem.