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Recommend me some ratcheting wrenches

Mickey O

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US made Armstrong (I have them, they're fine), Craftsman (On sale now at Sears) and S-K, if you got the money US made Snap On (bonus flank drive).
 
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scottmlew

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Alternatively, any hot deals at toolrage.com that could put me over the $150 threshold for free shipping? Or even ideas of things I might find useful but haven't considered?

The SK SureGrip wrench racks seem to be a pretty good deal, as is the Cyclone 1200KIT blow gun kit. The SK wrench racks appear to be very similar to the Ernst Grippers, and are low cost, making them good for padding out an order.

Yes, I just replied to my own post :)
 

Mickey O

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The SK SureGrip wrench racks seem to be a pretty good deal, as is the Cyclone 1200KIT blow gun kit. The SK wrench racks appear to be very similar to the Ernst Grippers, and are low cost, making them good for padding out an order.

Yes, I just replied to my own post :)

Those SK wrench racks are really reasonably priced but I haven't found many places that have them in stock (maybe because recent events at S-K), they have like 1 or 2 of a couple of sizes, if anyone knows who has a lot of them please post a link, I wand to get a whole bunch of different sizes.
 

chadster1

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If you are looking for metric reversing you will be hard pressed to beat this deal. $99.95 for 16 piece set. The large 4 piece completer set is on back order and they will ship them after the 15th, but they do go ahead and send the 12 piece set out. I got these for Christmas and have been very happy with them so far.

http://www.toolrage.com/prodview.asp?sku=KDT-9620PRO

I think I am going to buy some of those to resell on my truck. That is a deal!
 

cronic

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I think I am going to buy some of those to resell on my truck. That is a deal!

I agree, it was by far the cheapest I have found them and have been looking for a long time. Now if I can just find a 13 piece sae set ( 9509 ) for around the same price......
 

scottmlew

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I just called on the SK racks, they are not available.:shocking: Maybe next month

Where did you call? Toolrage claims that they had most of them in stock. They had all of the SureGrips, in fact, except for the 15 wrench, and a couple of the non-SureGrips.
 

Scooterfish

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Where did you call? Toolrage claims that they had most of them in stock. They had all of the SureGrips, in fact, except for the 15 wrench, and a couple of the non-SureGrips.

I called the 800 # from the link above and the girl told me to call their PA (state) office at 856-652-2548. These are drop shipped from the mfg. He told me someone just placed an online order and they were going to let them know they are not available
 

scottmlew

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Lovely. Now that they've told a third party, I wonder when they'll tell me.
 

rc201

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Hey everyone, I have a lot of craftsman/gearwrench ratcheting wrenches, haven't had any trouble with the cman ones, but the new models with the locking flex head are from china, ugly I must add,
 

rjohnson

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Go with Gearwrench, almost impossible to beat for the price they can be had.

I agree 100%. Plus if you break one, you'll send you a new one, free of charge, without you sending in the old one. I had a defective nutdriver shaft they did this for. Surprisingly nice tools.
 

Bart Simpson

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I agree 100%. Plus if you break one, you'll send you a new one, free of charge, without you sending in the old one. I had a defective nutdriver shaft they did this for.

They can afford to with that dirt cheap Chinese labor.

Detroit has 50 % unemployment right now.

I dont think even used USA made Ratcheting wrenches can come anywhere close to those China ones in price
 

bry@n

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I have the Snap On ratcheting wrenches and they are great.

I also have the Matco dbl box ratcheting wrenches in the cart and I like them alot. They get used more than the snappy's.
 

scottmlew

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Scottmlew, Let us know if you find out differently:thumbup:

I now have all 6 of the SK wrench racks I order in hand! They came from 2 different warehouses, which leads me to believe that their stock may be low (or perhaps gone). Anyone interested in them should probably call ToolRage directly to find out what is physically available.
 

Scooterfish

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I now have all 6 of the SK wrench racks I order in hand! They came from 2 different warehouses, which leads me to believe that their stock may be low (or perhaps gone). Anyone interested in them should probably call ToolRage directly to find out what is physically available.

Great, what colors did you get? I was told blue has carry handle, black no handle and green is for stubbie wrenches. What is the length and slots on the ones you got. Thanks:thumbup:
 

scottmlew

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Great, what colors did you get? I was told blue has carry handle, black no handle and green is for stubbie wrenches. What is the length and slots on the ones you got. Thanks:thumbup:

I have one black and the rest are green. The black has no handle and no "grippers"; the green do have grippers and are of varied capacity. None of my new SKs are for stubbies. The green models have virtually identical dimensions as their Ernst counterparts; I do not have an Ernst that is equivalent to the black one (nor do I believe one exists -- I believe the largest Ernst rack holds 15 wrenches).
 
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benjamming

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They can afford to with that dirt cheap Chinese labor.

Detroit has 50 % unemployment right now.

I dont think even used USA made Ratcheting wrenches can come anywhere close to those China ones in price

So made in USA ratcheting wrenches include SO linked above, Armstrong, Craftsman linked above, Wright?, SK? Any others?
 

scottmlew

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A few days ago, the 4 wrenches in the "completer" set came from ToolRage.com

So if anyone is waiting for these, they should be arriving any day now!
 

cronic

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A few days ago, the 4 wrenches in the "completer" set came from ToolRage.com

So if anyone is waiting for these, they should be arriving any day now!

Mine finally showed up a couple days ago as well. Took a little longer than I was expecting, but still a heck of a deal.
 

landon1

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i've used "junk" older bulky flip-over ratchet wrenches and reversible blackhawk. i bought a set of Gearwrench reversible on sale...$39.95 - haven't used them yet, as funds haven't allowed for next project to get started, but they seem to be pretty nice - idk if i'm crazy about the cap-stop head, but i can also see where it could maybe come in handy
 

quattrojon

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I have the Armstrong long set with a ratcheting box on one end and a std box on the other. I like the idea of using the std box to break the bolt loose and also for finishing tightening. This way the solid steel is doing all the hard work and the ratcheting end is spared that stress. Got mine off ebay, very pleased with them. The Armstrong and Matco are pretty much the same style.

These are my favourite ratcheting wrenches by far. I sell three times as many Gearwrench brand ratcheting wrenches though.
 

Mickey O

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Pic of an Armstrong:

armstrog-ratchet-wrench.jpg
 

superautobacs

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So made in USA ratcheting wrenches include SO linked above, Armstrong, Craftsman linked above, Wright?, SK? Any others?

Wright only has laminated versions.
SK's lineup consists of two Taiwanese OEMs.

Even though SO and Armstrong wrenches say USA, the internals are still imported. I have no reason to think differently about the Craftsmans as well.

The one thing I don't like about the GearWrench and many other ratcheting wrench OEMs is the backlash. Wrenches made by Kabo, another Taiwanese OEM, have the least amount of backlash. That could equate to a difference between having enough swing arc that'll engage that next tooth, or not.
 

BB26

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Even though Armstrong wrenches say USA, the internals are still imported. I have no reason to think differently about the Craftsmans as well.

I'm not so sure I buy this statement. How have they gotten away with stamping USA on these wrenches for the past ten years if they are not "100% Made in USA, from forge to finish" like their marketing materials claim? You don't think another tool company would have called them out on this by now if it was BS? :wtf:
 

Vinko

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Even though SO and Armstrong wrenches say USA, the internals are still imported. I have no reason to think differently about the Craftsmans as well.

What's your source for your claim that Armstrong's have imported internal parts? And what year did this start?
 

quattrojon

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Even though SO and Armstrong wrenches say USA, the internals are still imported. I have no reason to think differently about the Craftsmans as well.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Armstrong ratchet spanners are made in the USA, from the steel, to the forging and the final finishing, using American labour. Period.
 
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superautobacs

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Looks like I sparked you guy's to respond to my statement, and I was expecting someone would. :D
I guess I could've typed "I think" to start that sentence, but that may not have gotten the same type of response. :D
I have no source that explicitly states that; purely based on speculation--speculation that's based on what I've read over the year. SO, it's unfounded.

I did some more searching around and I've sided with your opinion, BB26; how could those companies, including Matco, with their earlier (USA) ratcheting wrenches, be able to market them as they have.

We know that Danaher Tool Group is accountable for producing some/all hand tools for Craftsman, Armstrong, Matco, KD, and GearWrench's lineup. Of these brands, GearWrench is marketed to be the go-to brand for ratcheting wrenches and it was logical for me to think that those same 72-tooth ratcheting mechanisms that are produced at either their Lea Way factory (Taiwan) or their branch factory, SATA (China), would also be the same ones used for the rest of Danaher's brands.

That was just an assumption. I never bothered to look into what some of the patents that Craftsman wrenches had were about--again, I assumed it was something to do with the shape of the wrench (cross beam type), for example. Here are some facts though: Easco Hand Tools, which is still alive and well today (I thought they were defunct except for their name), has quite a few patents on ratcheting mechanisms. One of their more recent patents, pertaining to ratcheting wrenches, was issued in Jan. 15th, 2008--not very long ago. Looking further, there's this patent which goes to show that Easco holds a patent on a version of their own modern ratcheting wrench. This Craftsman low profile ratchet, also with the Easco name, is basically a ratcheting wrench with a square drive (except it's not a 72-tooth. Same one is offered at Matco:
afr5tg.jpg


I had always thought all patents pertaining to modern ratcheting wrenches were covered by the so-called "father" of ratcheting wrenches: Bobby Hu--a Taiwanese. I was wrong; Easco has their own innovations, and they showcase it on the Sears tool aisles. You'd think that Armstrong would have more ratcheting wrench varieties, but I guess innovative tools are introduced under the Craftsman name first?

In any case, I'm more satisfied now to think that they are indeed manufactured in the USA.

Snap-on? I don't think so. :lol_hitti
 
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ATTappman

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The one thing I don't like about the GearWrench and many other ratcheting wrench OEMs is the backlash. Wrenches made by Kabo, another Taiwanese OEM, have the least amount of backlash. That could equate to a difference between having enough swing arc that'll engage that next tooth, or not.

Isn't backlash just a function of the number of teeth? As long as the mechanism uses a toothed gear, is there any way to reduce backlash other than increasing the number of teeth?
 

superautobacs

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Isn't backlash just a function of the number of teeth? As long as the mechanism uses a toothed gear, is there any way to reduce backlash other than increasing the number of teeth?

I'm no engineer so I may not have used that term correctly, but I've seen it used within the context of ratcheting mechanisms.

From my understanding, a mechanism with little backlash will engage the gears seamlessly, with little to no play in the forward and reversing motion of every successive ratcheting action. Conversely, a mechanism with lots of backlash results in a larger swing arc before engaging the next gear tooth.

You can easily simulate this with your own wrenches at home. Look to see how much "free-swing" there is before you engage that next gear. I find that every brand out there that I've touched (Lea Way/SATA (GearWrench), Easco Craftsman, Hi-Five (Stanley family), Infar (HF), Chang Loon (Princess Auto), RareStar (Gray/Princess Auto) has more backlash than a product that was manufactured by Kabo (escpecially the non-reversible models).

I may be wrong, so please correct me if I am.
 
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FNFS2000

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Where are the Hazet ratcheting wrenches made? They sure feel different than the taiwan ones.
 
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