When I was putting the clutch back together on my bike, some of the nuts were reverse thread. The MAC click style torque wrench I have doesn't work in reverse, but the beam style torque wrench I have works either way.
Get a clicker designed to use interchangeable heads such as the
Sturtevant Richmont CCM series clickers. The wrench only torques one way, more accurate and easier to manufacture, less prone to problems, etc, and to torque left handed, you merely reverse the head.
I have three of the SR interchangeable head clickers of varying ranges, and three sizes of ratchet heads, so they fit almost anything.
The beam style is more accurate because you are less prone to over torquing. Think hauling on the wrench for all your worth, it clicks, did you stop hauling on it? With beam style you have to watch the indicator so you'll notice if you go over the torque requirement. At least that's my take on it.
#1 on this. I had the guy in our calibration room show me this on the calibration equipment. It was very easy to over torque with a clicker, all you had to do was pull completely thru the click till the tool becomes "solid" and you have just over torqued. You actually want to quit pulling after it breaks over and before you hit the internal stop at the end of the click.
For a quick idea of what Sturtevant Richmont thinks is most accurate and what is less so, follow the link to the descriptions of their various products. Typical deflecting beam types come in at 2%, even my cheap old 1970's Craftsman beam types were 2%. You pay alot of dough to get that in a clicker.
Charles
http://www.srtorque.com/Products/SystemsandTools/STindex.html