Those ratchets are great, but hardly necessary steps for someone upgrading once in 30 years.
I’d argue there is no better reason to buy the best.
Those ratchets are great, but hardly necessary steps for someone upgrading once in 30 years.
Interesting facts. What about the rest of the tool such as the metal, ergonomics, etc. the logoBahco 80 tooth pear head ratchets have identical internals to Snap On Dual 80 (Bahco is owned by Snap On). They're a lot more affordable.
This exactly what pushed me to buy my first FH80 the other day - I want to see/feel what all the fuss is about!I’d argue there is no better reason to buy the best.
That’s fair. I didn’t look into their ethics.Gearwrench is garbage in my opinion soley based on their ownership.(dont like the quality either) Anyone remember bain capital. Or Armstrong or KD." Hey lets buy american companies and kick all the employees to the curb then take the intellectual property to slave labor land and make it there to sell back to americans". I could care less if gearwrench surpassed snapon or any other by a long shot I still wouldnt buy them. Ill stick with Wright. Family owned made here by us for us.
These are the same as the Eascos I was looking at. The price for these was a little high compared to new…at least on eBay. Can’t find any local.
I use F80s at work. I think they’re decent. For me I don’t think it’s worth the cost.This exactly what pushed me to buy my first FH80 the other day - I want to see/feel what all the fuss is about!![]()
At full Snappy retail? Totally agree. I also doubt it will be as life-changing an experienceI use F80s at work. I think they’re decent. For me I don’t think it’s worth the cost.
I use F80s at work. I think they’re decent. For me I don’t think it’s worth the cost.
Becareful you will start to add on flex, long flex, locking flex, round head, etc., stay away from the Snap on website wishlist too addictiveThis exactly what pushed me to buy my first FH80 the other day - I want to see/feel what all the fuss is about!![]()
I agree about the enjoyable part! I’ve slowly been replacing things and the joy of using good tools makes me wonder why I was letting myself struggle with worn tools for so long lol.At full Snappy retail? Totally agree. I also doubt it will be as life-changing an experience
as one would be lead to believe, but I'm at a good point to allow myself to indulge a bit.
If it makes routine maintenance or a new project that much more tolerable/enjoyable,
I'm all for it - and I'm certain if I decide I don't like it that much, somebody else will..!
I’ll have to check that out. I have a long rigid angle iron piece I heave and clamp on my plywood to make straight cuts. It works! But it’s cumbersome. My first indulgence that sparred a tool overhaul was a dewalt 12” double bevel compound miter saw. I love that thing. I build very basic things but that saw has taken the quality of my work to another level.Off topic life changing tool picked up the Kreg accu cut circular saw guide IMHO wow from Lowes. I used it with the Makita corded circular saw with a nice blade 7 1/4 inch nice straight cuts. Along with a nice contractor tablesaw you can build anything.
Same! (I just can't leave well enough alone though...)Happy with my Tekton ratchets.
This ^^

Yeah, those old school round head fine tooth quick release ratchets were probably the best ratchet ever to wear the Craftsman Brand. However, the Ebay crazies made them pretty much out of reach due to unrealistic pricing.
Yeah, those old school round head fine tooth quick release ratchets were probably the best ratchet ever to wear the Craftsman Brand. However, the Ebay crazies made them pretty much out of reach due to unrealistic pricing.
However, once in a while you can stumble upon an Easco/KD version with a nice, knurled handle at a decent price.
I agree. Those are some of the best ratchets ever made. Fine tooth, quick release, thumb wheel. I'd be perfectly happy having them as my only ratchets. They're getting hard to find and usually not cheap. I'm also fond of the classic SK round heads and they're usually cheap at garage sales.
Yeah, those old school round head fine tooth quick release ratchets were probably the best ratchet ever to wear the Craftsman Brand. However, the Ebay crazies made them pretty much out of reach due to unrealistic pricing.
However, once in a while you can stumble upon an Easco/KD version with a nice, knurled handle at a decent price.