ez-duzit
Well-known member
...I've jumped while standing on both handles at times. At one point I weighed over 300 lbs.
That image would make a wonderful avatar.
...I've jumped while standing on both handles at times. At one point I weighed over 300 lbs.
That image would make a wonderful avatar.![]()
You guys are funny. Not scientific you say? Just because you disagree does not mean it is useless. He asked a question.. How much physical presure will this group of ratchets take before they break? Good question. He did some back ground research to find out what ratchets fall into this price range. Did he construct a hypothesis, no, he left that up to the reader. Do an experiment, yep, even with a fairly accurate piece of equipment which most of us dont own. Did he change a bunch of variables? Nope, your not supposed to do that when setting a baseline. Did he draw a conclusion? No, just that he did not want to take a $100+ ratchet to the salvage yard, when there are much less expensive choices that will get the job done. Report his results? Yep...
This was way more scientific that believing that the only way to remove a stubborn bolt is with a high dollar tool.![]()
While this test is not scientific (have yet to see one on this forum) it does confirm what I already know. Imported ratchets works just as well as their domestically produced counterparts
After looking at the article, I think they made a huge but common mistake with the vintage Craftsman ratchet. The ratchet shown is from the late 1940s to mid 1950s . . .
01. Craftsman
Model Number: Unknown, it's vintage
Where It Was Made: USA
Where We Bought It: Swap meet
What Broke: It seemed broken but only skipped a tooth internally. The action became coarse and clunky.
Max Torque: 333 lb-ft
Price: $10
Torque Per Dollar: 33 lb-ft
Read more: http://www.hotrod.com/feature_storie...#ixzz2bUVrk2cg
Skipping teeth is common for vintage Craftsman but it is USUALLY old grease that has dried. Their test is invalid.
Steve
If that Hot Rod Mag test seemed valuable to anyone here, LEARN TO USE YOUR BREAKER BAR!![]()

I wouldn't say this test supports that theory. There were some OLD US-made tools against new imported ones. The new imports had the advantage of both lacking wear and newer design. This was not a test between new US made vs new import.
.
I actually like tests like this. There really is useful info to take from these, even if you make claims like "there could be manufacturing variation."
I know some members here always cry "it's not scientific enough" at tests like these. They're not scientific tests, but they're tools for use in the garage, not a laboratory. The tests are just ways to gather casual information.
The main point is that even a decent quality ratchet will withstand anything you can do by hand. You'll need a cheater bar to break almost anything.
If that Hot Rod Mag test seemed valuable to anyone here, LEARN TO USE YOUR BREAKER BAR!![]()
it may just be me but i don't see any pro usa guys complaining on this. just the other side giving a rasberry against high dollar us ratchets. i don't have any issue with what the tested, that is up to them. i just don't think you can base any scientific conclusions on used ratchet decades old.
their test does not show anything except what point one particular ratchet broke at. for a couple hundred dollars more they could have done a real test and done at least three of each particular ratchet. any real test must be repeated to gain any amount of validity.
...The tests are just ways to gather casual information...
I'm not seeing a rasberry against US ratchets.
While I prefer USA tools, I'm pro buying a tool for an intended purpose.
I'm not going to spend the coin for high dollar usa tools to put in my furniture delivery trucks, road/junkyard totes, or to put in the back of my soft top broncos. If something gets lost or stolen out of any of those I'm not out alot of money.
The snappy, armstrong, cornwell, usa crafty etc stays in my shop.
In my world there is room for both high quality/high dollar tools and the low cost stuff that is both easy to warranty and doesn't bleed my wallet.
I find objective reviews helpful on how best to spend my money. I don't see this review as an import vs domestic ******* contest. Merely just some info a guy is passing along
i don't get the guys who are saying." look, look the import ratchets are just as good or better than the us made ratchets. that will show you pro usa fools." the test does not show that as they don't go head to head.
As good as?? Maybe that's debatable. Better that's doubtful. I do beleive there are good values to be found on imported stuff.
The problem as I see it on this forum is all of the bashing. This is a devisive and strongly opinionated forum. It goes both ways. For instance a guy who replied in this thread will rip on craftsman stuff then wonder why Mac tools threads get heated. It's the mantra here.
It doesn't appear the enjoyment of working with tools, collecting, obtaining, etc are good enough reasons to bond those will like mindsets. It has to regress into brand vs brand, import vs domestic, etc. The only way this will change if we all play well together. I don't think this will happen but I'll be the first to say I'll give it a try.
it is an interesting test of +or- 20 dollar ratchets. but to get rock solid info from a test of one ratchet. hell, nobody will argue that there can be and will be ratchets that are d.o.a. out of the box whether they are 10 or 100 dollar ratchets. i don't see how you can argue that you are getting top notch written in stone info from a test of one ratchet. for peanuts they could have tested multiples. if the only test was to destroy then i am pretty sure it took less than an hour to destroy all of them.
again, my opinion has nothing to do with what the coo of the tools is. i would feel the same way if they had tested a pile of us made ratchets the same way.
i bet if they took a stack of 10 (pick your brand and model) identical ratchets you would get a 10-20 % variance in what it takes to break one.
Yup!Everyone laughs at the fat boy, until they realize they're too scrawny for the big jobs.![]()

No offense but i think you are over thinking this. The USA craftsman was outperformed by new, better designs, and so was the proto.
Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that they were used?


I wish Gearwrench was in this test.
The Gearhead ratchet??? Did you mean Gearwrench? Nver mind I see were the Gearhead ratchet came from. Never heard of Gearhead got to check them out.What's with the tease? Just post the results!
01. Craftsman - Vintage USA - 333 lb-ft
02. Craftsman - China - 808 lb-ft
03. Duralast - China - 649 lb-ft
04. Duralast - Taiwan - 890 lb-ft
05. Gearhead - Taiwan - 828 lb-ft
06. Husky - China - 781 lb-ft
07. Kobalt - Taiwan - 828 lb-ft
08. Pittsburgh Pro - China - 794 lb-ft
09.Powerbuilt - China - 632 lb-ft
10. Powerbuilt - Taiwan - 818 lb-ft
11. Proto - Vintage USA - 659 lb-ft
http://www.hotrod.com/feature_stories/1310_ratchet_handles_torture_test/
The Gearhead ratchet??? Did you mean Gearwrench?
And why not the truck brands?
I get the whole $20 for a junkyard ratchet thing. But that's just a gimmick for the article. Add 5 or 6 more ratchets and it would be real interesting.
I got a near-new Snap On 1/2" ratchet for $30 off CL.
Looks like the strongest ratchet was only 36 tooth.
So the question arises... has anyone done a ratchet test to the specs desired by GJ-ers? (Including new, cleaned, and properly relubed; old, rebuilt, and properly relubed; multiple units; last gen USA and "same"/replacement overseas model; etc).
)SK and Wright are not truck brands. Also that Craftsman ratchet can not be good news for Matco tools.


So, to reiterate, no one reading this forum could even dream of breaking one of these ratchets without a pipe on the handle. I'd pay to see someone create 330ft-lbs of torque on a 7" moment arm, barehanded.

The lead in to the story was about being at a junkyard.
I don't know about you all, but my tool truck brands don't go to the junkyard

it is hard for me to tell if you are being sarcastic or not.