This is not a ratchet it is an impact.I personally can't stand air ratchets over 1/4" drive. But guys who love air ratchets have tight pants over the impact air ratchets.
This is not a ratchet it is an impact.I personally can't stand air ratchets over 1/4" drive. But guys who love air ratchets have tight pants over the impact air ratchets.
Some folks are confused thinking it is an impact ratchet, but it is not. It is a low profile angle head impact. There is an impact mechanism driving through a set of really beefy bevel gears producing 180 ft-lbs in reverse.it's an impact ratchet
North Carolina with parts made in the US and abroad.Can anyone that bought one tell me where its made? where are these things built?
North Carolina with parts made in the US and abroad.
North Carolina with parts made in the US and abroad.
though and plan to get one regardless.I never know exactly what that means. Hopefully the American component is something more than an illegal alien squirting in a drop of US manufactured oil for min wage.
I like the ratchetthough and plan to get one regardless.
No problem, yes I do.Thanks for the info. I guess 50% isn't bad in this day and age. Do you work for IR?
I want one, anyone up for a group buy?
Do I want the 3/8 or 1/2"?
3/8 would be my choice, internally both I think are the same, so its just which sockets to use and I want more clearance.
This is what I was thinking. I don't have the money to burn on both, and if you got one, you'd probably only *really* want the socket size-capacity of the 1/2 or smaller socket-fit of the 3/8 every 50th time you went for this tool anyway. That's fine if you're doing crank pulleys and impossibly-placed, frozen bolts on tightly-packed engine bays for a living, but I just want to make my weekend wrenching more enjoyable than the usual "ten band-aids before dinner every Sunday". I'd certainly get use out of it, there are plenty of instances where a job I went into relishing the challenge made me miserable before the first part came loose. My starter during this last snowstorm comes to mind. OK, I wasn't actually looking forward to that in the first place, but this thing would have made that job feel like I was cheating.
I'd say go with the 3/8s. It is easier to "upsize" than downsize.
Meaning if I need to use a 1/2" socket, I can use my low profile adapter which is less than 1/4" tall. Conversely, a reducer is almost an inch tall.
Then there is the torque output. 3/8 drive goes up to 1" or so. If you are needing a socket much bigger than that, chances are, 180ft-lbs aint cutting it anyways. That is roughly HALF of a solid 3/8 impact, and quite a few fasteners in larger sizes struggle with regular 3/8 impacts.
Since I buy decent impacts, there is no difference in square drive fit. 3/8 impact socket of equivalent size often does have a thinner wall, which is quite important these days. 180ft-lbs aint gonna hurt them or cause undue flex, if it did, my 2115timax would have destroyed them long ago.