Rick Courtright
Hawkeye
Hi,
Over the years, I can't tell you how many tools I've picked up in the street while riding the bicycle, just walking down the road, or even in the car when I encounter one of those "Hey, what was that?" moments and it's safe to stop. Among them are several ratchets, all but one Craftsman brand. One of them was just added this evening, making the count five if I haven't given away one or two more over the years...
Every one of them was dry and gritty, as if they'd never ever had a drop of oil (including today's find, which is probably the most worn specimen, too.) All of them benefited greatly from moderately generous applications of oil where it could run into the mechanism. Now I'm not a professional wrench spinner, so the argument of whether one brand lasts longer than another doesn't really affect my life. However, my tools do get a fair amount of "shade tree" use, and in a moment of curiosity I did take apart my oldest and probably most used ratchet last summer to clean, lube and just learn how it worked. It's a Craftsman, Christmas present in 1970, which has been kept clean and oiled since new, as instructed by a former neighbor and professional mechanic whose tools always looked almost surgically clean when not in use. There was virtually no wear inside, and once put back together, it was as tight or tighter than any of the newer ones, and a whole bunch smoother. I think it will still be going strong far longer than I am.
So just for giggles, my question is this: how many of you...
a) give your ratchets no care whatsoever, just grab and use them; or
b) wipe them down and give them a spot of oil in the mechanism once in a while (my practice); or
c) actually take them apart and give them a super clean and relube on occasion, and maybe even go so far as to rebuild those you can get parts kits for?
Rick C
Over the years, I can't tell you how many tools I've picked up in the street while riding the bicycle, just walking down the road, or even in the car when I encounter one of those "Hey, what was that?" moments and it's safe to stop. Among them are several ratchets, all but one Craftsman brand. One of them was just added this evening, making the count five if I haven't given away one or two more over the years...
Every one of them was dry and gritty, as if they'd never ever had a drop of oil (including today's find, which is probably the most worn specimen, too.) All of them benefited greatly from moderately generous applications of oil where it could run into the mechanism. Now I'm not a professional wrench spinner, so the argument of whether one brand lasts longer than another doesn't really affect my life. However, my tools do get a fair amount of "shade tree" use, and in a moment of curiosity I did take apart my oldest and probably most used ratchet last summer to clean, lube and just learn how it worked. It's a Craftsman, Christmas present in 1970, which has been kept clean and oiled since new, as instructed by a former neighbor and professional mechanic whose tools always looked almost surgically clean when not in use. There was virtually no wear inside, and once put back together, it was as tight or tighter than any of the newer ones, and a whole bunch smoother. I think it will still be going strong far longer than I am.
So just for giggles, my question is this: how many of you...
a) give your ratchets no care whatsoever, just grab and use them; or
b) wipe them down and give them a spot of oil in the mechanism once in a while (my practice); or
c) actually take them apart and give them a super clean and relube on occasion, and maybe even go so far as to rebuild those you can get parts kits for?
Rick C