I mention it because over the years I have heard many stories about how SO makes the strongest ratchet, therefore "everything else is junk". I know these stories should be take with a grain of salt but strength was supposed to be one of their selling points and made them worth whatever premium price SO charges for it. But if SO is not the strongest, will it make customers shop elsewhere? I am not a professional mechanic and not especially loyal to any brand so it doesn't matter a whole lot to me but a ratchet that is half the price and just as strong as SO sure gets my attention. I just wanted to see if this would change anyone's opinion about Icon.
In my experience, "strongest" was never about the pipe test. It all dies.
It's about long term repeated loading and what the typical failure mode is. In my experience the number one fault of my dual80s has been slip/grab. Over a lot of cycles, the mechanism can eventually slip at high load and move a few teeth, then re-grab. I've never broken an anvil on a dual80, but I did bend a 3/8 drive handle once. Compare this to the matco88, my experience is the failure mode is typically the snap ring blowing out. The guts fall out and it just gives out 100%.
So which is "stronger"? Lets say the matco holds 20% more peak load, is it "stronger"? Do you want it to be? I bought and use both for different reasons. Chucking something up with a pipe on it is a fun test and all, and it's very easy to produce data from. Compare it to the "how many times can 2ndGearRubber violently yank on this ratchet with all his strength, then load it to 80% of failure, then slam it again test" - much harder to do and collect good data from. But what is more like your actual use? How to quantify that, I have no idea. Frankly the tool trucks and other premium brands have sold the "massive peak strength" argument at times, because at one point it was an easy box to check over other cheaper options. As cheaper stuff has gotten much better, this rather strawman claim now makes them look dumb. But it was easy once to say "yeah bro we're the best look how long a pipe it will take", rather than have some nuanced discussion about failure modes, lifecycle between rebuilds, etc.
All of that said, good ratchets seem quite plentiful these days. If Icon has an issue, the 18" 3/8 drive ratchets will find it quickly. Those tools are inherently a bit sketchy to use. My guess? The icon will do well. I really liked Gearwrench 84s a decade ago and they worked for me. I'm sure the G2s will be at least as good as those, without the snap-ring issue.