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Screwball Ratcheting Screwdriver

wyndycity

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Joined
Dec 28, 2008
Messages
286
Location
Chicago
Here’s a rare retro tool oddity from the swingin’ 70’s…the aptly named Screwball! :pimpflash

I know ratcheting screwdrivers aren’t exactly that unique or unusual but the name "Screwball" just begs for attention.

Approximately 30 tooth ratcheting screwdriver with a roughly 2” diameter handle. Handle has both a red and yellow colored hemisphere (overall, it looks like a fishing bobber). The handle feels ergonomic and comfortable – using the Screwball feels much like operating a standard household door handle. The shaft is aluminum with a strong magnetic bit holder. I only have one original standard bit but modern ¼” bits fit nicely as well. Integrated into the handle are three bit compartments enclosed by a clear plastic component which can be rotated about the shaft to reveal/store bits. The blue switch is a forward/reverse selector and can also be aligned directly in the middle to lock the shaft and disable the ratcheting feature to enable use as a non-ratcheting driver.

View media item 1691
View media item 1692
Hard to see in pics but handle reads:
“SCREWBALL
Pat
Pend
RATCHET
DRIVER
USA
S/V Tool Co."

I've never heard of the company S/V elsewhere. I also found out that there’s an ad for it in the 1978 May issue of Popular Mechanics which can be found in Google books. Looks like it was a Ronco product. I don't know if that's a good or bad thing. Here’s a direct link to it:

http://books.google.com/books?id=n88DAAAAMBAJ&lpg=PA300&pg=PA300#v=onepage&q=&f=false

Enjoy. :beer:
 
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Uncle Buck

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Mar 7, 2005
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I got one as a gift years ago, I never took to it. I don't think I even gave it away, I just tossed it out. I never regretted tossing it though.
 
OP
W

wyndycity

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Joined
Dec 28, 2008
Messages
286
Location
Chicago
I don't think I've ever even really used it either despite it's comfy feel, yet I can't bear to just get rid of it. It's not even in my toolbox...it just sits in a utility drawer in my kitchen.

I just find it quite interesting to have. If it wasn't called "Screwball", I probably wouldn't have given it a second thought.
 

mkwilkie

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May 28, 2010
Messages
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Do you still have that screwball? I had one while I was going through my carpentry apprenticeship in the late 70's. The finish carpenters would borrow it to install doorwalls. Now, in my 60's I would love to have it since I have some arthritis in my hands. Any chance you would sell it?
Thanks,
Marilyn
 

oldwino

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Nov 16, 2009
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Location
Sonoma County California (wine country)
i remember getting one as a gift...Know I never used it (just looked funky), but don't remember if I tossed it, or if it is stashed away somewhere...oh well, when I'm gone the kids can figure out what to do with it.
 

66HertzClone

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Dec 6, 2006
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Long Valley, NJ
I had one once, I can't remember breaking it or giving it away, the ball end was yellow and the other plastic pieces were a orange red mix. I do remember using it to remove those tough to loosen phillips screws holding the ring around a sealed beam headlight in place. The "ball" end made it easier to keep the tip from camming out.
 

bonneyman

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Apr 22, 2010
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Desert SW
Do you still have that screwball? I had one while I was going through my carpentry apprenticeship in the late 70's. The finish carpenters would borrow it to install doorwalls. Now, in my 60's I would love to have it since I have some arthritis in my hands. Any chance you would sell it?
Thanks,
Marilyn

Do a search on the forum. There have been several people lately who have gotten round drivers in tool lots they've bought.
 

Blacknwhitepit

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Feb 19, 2005
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3,176
Location
Eastern Tennessee
Do you still have that screwball? I had one while I was going through my carpentry apprenticeship in the late 70's. The finish carpenters would borrow it to install doorwalls. Now, in my 60's I would love to have it since I have some arthritis in my hands. Any chance you would sell it?
Thanks,
Marilyn

I have found a couple of these within the past year.

I may have one around for sale if you can't find one. PM me if interested.

-BWP
 

mrshaun

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Sep 10, 2009
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4,033
Location
Killeen - Fort Hood
my grandpa had one of those. it was yellow and red and he used it all time. that was until he got an ssdmr4b then it was never used again
 

Broncoman

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Mar 27, 2009
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Location
Virginia
Just got rid of one at the flea market the other week, got a buck for it, looked like it would work well but was just so damn ugly.
 

adamshives

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Aug 24, 2010
Messages
2
OH MY GOD PEOPLE

My dad built my first workbench when I was 2 years old. For my entire childhood while other kids played with toys I played with tools. My father could build just about anything and he had a funky style which gave his projects a nice appeal. He had this screwdriver that was yellow and red and it was a standard part of his tool belt. He had it for some 20-30 years and he used it very often. It was great because the ball allowed the weight to bear on the palm rather than the fingers.
Well, when I was about 15 years old I was using the screwdriver on something and things were going fine. Then I needed a soft mallet and decided to use the screwdriver handle instead...The damn thing popped open and blew apart right before my eyes. I was petrified to go upstairs and show my dad what I did. Still, I walked up and held out the tool and said "Dad, I broke your screwdriver. I used it incorrectly and I broke it." He was upset that he lost the screwdriver but he was impressed and proud that I admitted what I'd done and admitted that I did it wrong.
As a replacement, I bought him another ratcheting screwdriver though it wasn't as nice as the "screwball" as I've come to learn it's called.
My father has had problems with depression and alcoholism and just recently attempted to take his life. He's now in a vegetative state in the hospital and we aren't sure what the future holds.
In his will, he left me all his tools. I hope that one day he'll be able to use his tools again so I'm cleaning and refurbishing his entire set.
Some of them I want to just hold and possibly frame because they have such sentimental value to me as they bring back memories of childhood.

If any of you care to part with your screwball screwdriver, I'll certainly purchase it from you. I've been searching for 13 years now trying to find him a replacement. There are other similar screwdrivers, but I want to give him the same thing that I broke.

Please contact me and we can go from there. Thank you so much!:bowdown:
 

Eric Commarato

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Feb 22, 2010
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188
Location
Mississippi
Had an orange one that you flipped the shaft around one end for straight blade and end for a phillips head. It was a piece of ****.
 

Stuart in MN

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Sep 8, 2005
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23,052
Location
Minneapolis
I bought my dad one of those for Christmas back in about 1980. I remember he really liked it and used it a lot. It did work pretty well.
 

adamshives

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Aug 24, 2010
Messages
2
Thanks guys. I have those easy drivers. They are pretty good because they are versatile but not as solid as the screwball was because the shafts can fall out of the easydriver.
 
Joined
Sep 14, 2010
Messages
14
PLEASE PM me. I'm desperate to obtain a Screwball Screwdriver. My mother recently broke hers and can't use any other screwdriver because of her advanced arthritis. She is quite the handywoman and she was just so upset when she broke hers. I'm trying to be a hero and get her one. Please help me!!!
 
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Yes, but she's old school-lol! (No offense, mom). Likes the satisfaction of using own blood,sweat, and tears to get work done.
 

shotgunfatcat

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May 19, 2010
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I am the Wanderer
PLEASE PM me. I'm desperate to obtain a Screwball Screwdriver. My mother recently broke hers and can't use any other screwdriver because of her advanced arthritis. She is quite the handywoman and she was just so upset when she broke hers. I'm trying to be a hero and get her one. Please help me!!!

It seems as though there are a few people on here with them, and they said to PM them.
 

shotgunfatcat

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I am the Wanderer
PLEASE PM me. I'm desperate to obtain a Screwball Screwdriver. My mother recently broke hers and can't use any other screwdriver because of her advanced arthritis. She is quite the handywoman and she was just so upset when she broke hers. I'm trying to be a hero and get her one. Please help me!!!

I'm sorry, I'm new to Garage Journal. I'm just really eager to get one for my mom

NO worries you just stated to pm you, when a few members said to pm them, the dirty work is up to you.

I hope this works out for you and you stick around on this site.
 

imacalpine

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Joined
Apr 6, 2012
Messages
1
Handiest tool I ever owned. Most comfortable screwdriver I ever used. Mine died this month after 30+ years of extensive use. Wish they were still being made.
 

JASTECH

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Oct 21, 2009
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2,671
Location
Gering, NE
I know them by Easy Driver, my parents sent one to my uncle after he had fingers smashed off at work building the newest machine for the thinnist Coors can. It came in a tube with bits in there too. My mother put it in the crotch of underware that she bought him just for the occasion. I have problems with my hands too and would like one and another for back up. Please PM me if you can help me out.
 

Danglerb

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Joined
Sep 6, 2007
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9,736
Location
SoCal
Easy Driver ball and screwball are different.

Easy driver is a two colored ball you change ratcheting directions by putting the tool in the other end of the ball. Its made of Lexan and except for the little fingers where the tool slides in they seem fairly indestructible.

Screwball is more a pear shape, originally sold on TV, and bits are held in a ring around the drive shaft/bit holder.
 

lzenglish

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Sep 3, 2009
Messages
616
Location
California
I got my first one as a gift in the late 60's, to early 70's, and thought (at that time it was cheap Japan junk), so I hardley ever used it. I had no idea it was a USA made damm fine tool, until my good buddy "bonneyman" said they seemed to have a good ratchet mechanism. So, I proceeded to look for, and find 3 of them in the last 2 years.

Wayne
 

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Danglerb

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I have a Pratt Reed version, and two originals, but still keeping an eye open for the mini ball.
 

fowldarr

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Oct 23, 2009
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Location
Coastal Oregon
I know that this is an old thread, but I picked up to of these in a big box of screwdrivers bought at the end of an estate sale. One has all the original bits. the other is missing one bit, but has the rest. Pretty neat little gizmos. Still sorting through the box hoping to find the other bit. I'll post a pic of them later in this same thread rather than starting a new one.
 

davethorik

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Sep 14, 2013
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Norka, Ohio
I know that this is an old thread, but I picked up to of these in a big box of screwdrivers bought at the end of an estate sale. One has all the original bits. the other is missing one bit, but has the rest. Pretty neat little gizmos. Still sorting through the box hoping to find the other bit. I'll post a pic of them later in this same thread rather than starting a new one.

Fowldarr, here is another thread I started about these in the vintage tool section:
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=331373
 

JohnDeere1

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Jun 21, 2017
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710
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Kentucky
I have a newer one made by skillsaw it's red and black and has a part in the top that pops up and holds the bits quite a few of them it's the size of a pool ball and reversible I'd say it's now now discontinued I use it sometimes I keep it in my night stand I'll dig it out and snap a pic.
 

JohnDeere1

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Here's pics also the shaft extends
 

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