Pear head. Easy to reverse one handed. Fully rebuildable. More choices available. I'm also just used to them.
Pear head. Easy to reverse one handed. Fully rebuildable. More choices available. I'm also just used to them.


Other than in a roto ratchet application, are there actually ANY advantages to having a round head?
I voted pear but I'm warming up to round. I've got a few RHFT that as I spend more time with I'm liking more and more. But growing up, every roundhead I came across came out of some craptacular import set that HF would be ashamed to sell. Think Buffalo (if anyone remembers them) or some no-name cheap discount store house brand. Pearheads though were good quality (in my house, they CM and Indestro). So for me roundheads have a certain stigma to overcome still....
But there's a definite advantage with pear heads of just flicking your thumb to change direct!
Other than in a roto ratchet application, are there actually ANY advantages to having a round head?
Pear head. Easy to reverse one handed. Fully rebuildable. More choices available. I'm also just used to them.
It doesnt really matter to me, I Grew up with Round heads and Learned how to switch directions with one hand.

I bet all that fingertip dexterity makes you a hit with the ladies.![]()
![]()
It doesnt really matter to me, I Grew up with Round heads and Learned how to switch directions with one hand.
A question comes to my mind: why QR ratchets are so unpopular on garagejournal? Few guys in this thread admitted to their fondness of QR but all collections have majority of non-QR. And nobody mentions QR to newbies.
I believe Craftman had the rights to the "quick release" patent in 1965. No other company could use quick release until the patent was up. Just like Flank Drive and Snap On Tools. Quick release ratchets are associated with Craftsman tools. Craftsman ratchets were okay but not really that good. When you bought a Craftsman tool set the first thing you would do is buy better ratchets.
http://home.comcast.net/~alloy-artifacts/craftsman-maker-v.html#qr-ratchets
A question comes to my mind: why QR ratchets are so unpopular on garagejournal? Few guys in this thread admitted to their fondness of QR but all collections have majority of non-QR. And nobody mentions QR to newbies.
I think that in the past professionals feared Quick Release because they had (still do?) a drilled out center in the drivepiece/squaredrive for the plunger that moves when you push the release button. That looks like it would make the drivepiece weaker. Not as much cross section metal.
I think the newer professional stuff might have that drilling a bit smaller than on the old Craftsman roundhead. All have a little metal drilled out at right angle for the ball and spring (or pushrod for the quickrelease) but I don't think that drilling goes all the way to the base on the non quick release.
It just comes to my mind that I don't think there is such a thing as a quick release on a breaker bar!

My opinion on QR, craftsman started it and held the pat. When the pat expired, all the cheapy ratchets added the feature. Other then the rare SO QR, can anybody name a higher quailty ratchet that had QR. I am refuring to old school USA toolmaker, not newer higher grade imports. The only one that comes to mine are non craftsman RHFT