Background:
The gun has only been used a couple times since new. I went to remove caliper bracket bolts from a 3/4T Sierra. Factory manual says to torque these bolts to 221 ft lbs and use Loctite. These factory bolts have never been removed before and weren't particularly rusty or badly corroded.
The gun failed to break them free despite the guns rating of 750 ft lbs. Had to use a 24" breaker bar and lots of force.
I admit my pneumatic setup wasn't optimal. (ie 2 ea 50' X 3/8" curly hoses and generic couplings/fittings).
Questions:
1. Should this gun have been able to break them free? Were my expectations overly optimistic?
2. Is the IR 750 ft lb spec bogus. (like motor HP ratings).
3. Could required breakaway torque have have really exceeded re-installation torque by >3X. (due to Loctite, age, etc)
4. Is there a huge degradation factor based on setup. (ie hoses/fittings)
Other then this experience the gun has seemed to perform just fine.
TIA for any insight.
The gun has only been used a couple times since new. I went to remove caliper bracket bolts from a 3/4T Sierra. Factory manual says to torque these bolts to 221 ft lbs and use Loctite. These factory bolts have never been removed before and weren't particularly rusty or badly corroded.
The gun failed to break them free despite the guns rating of 750 ft lbs. Had to use a 24" breaker bar and lots of force.
I admit my pneumatic setup wasn't optimal. (ie 2 ea 50' X 3/8" curly hoses and generic couplings/fittings).
Questions:
1. Should this gun have been able to break them free? Were my expectations overly optimistic?
2. Is the IR 750 ft lb spec bogus. (like motor HP ratings).
3. Could required breakaway torque have have really exceeded re-installation torque by >3X. (due to Loctite, age, etc)
4. Is there a huge degradation factor based on setup. (ie hoses/fittings)
Other then this experience the gun has seemed to perform just fine.
TIA for any insight.