10thanncobra
Active member
Im kind of laughing at this also out the shops Ive worked in,between 14 techs, me and only one other I ever saw torqued a wheel. gun and run lol
2 min per car X 10 cars per day, 20 min per day.
20 min per day X 5 days per week, 100min per week, 1 hour and 40 minutes.
100min per week X 52 weeks per year, 5200 min per year, 86.6 hours, 3.61 DAYS per year.
3.6 DAYS.
I used to use hand tools. Now air/electric is used on anything within reach. Time, time, time, time, time. Time, it's all I got to sell, so making the most of it when there's more work waiting matters.

2 min per car X 10 cars per day, 20 min per day. 20 min per day X 5 days per week, 100min per week, 1 hour and 40 minutes. 100min per week X 52 weeks per year, 5200 min per year, 86.6 hours, 3.61 DAYS per year.
2 min per car X 10 cars per day, 20 min per day.
20 min per day X 5 days per week, 100min per week, 1 hour and 40 minutes.
100min per week X 52 weeks per year, 5200 min per year, 86.6 hours, 3.61 DAYS per year.
3.6 DAYS.
I used to use hand tools. Now air/electric is used on anything within reach. Time, time, time, time, time. Time, it's all I got to sell, so making the most of it when there's more work waiting matters.
Funny how only the backyard arm chair mechanics have problems with torque sticks. In which they most likely have 0 experience with
I'm an amateur. I'll use a torque wrench.
Funny how people with mechanical and engineering degrees are explaining why torque sticks shouldn't be considered an acceptable substitute to a torque wrench, but hacks - sorry, mechanics - completely ignore those facts.
There's a difference between sitting behind a desk and in front of a textbook vs. reality. I know, by profession I'm a mechanical engineer for a helicopter manufacturer. My father is a mechanic and been so 30+ years. I learned a lot from him growing up and car/motorcycles are my hobby, not career.
The same can be said for torque wrenches, as far as accuracy... torque is a terrible indicator or bolt tension or preload. However for most applications its more than good enough. So maybe a torque stick is not accurate, but is it accurate enough?
I work with mechanics in the hangar all the time and they certainly don't use a torque wrench for every nut/bolt, even though they all have specs. Critical fasteners, yes. Sometimes you have to say, its good enough.
What I've always been told about torque wrenches is that without knowing a lot of other variables - materials, surface treatment (antiseize, thread locker, etc), they're more for consistency and rough order of magnitude torque than anything else. Critical applications (that I've seen) always use torque + angle, or TTY fasteners. I've also seen some torque-indicating fasteners, but not often (mostly outside the scope of what I test). That said, a torque wrench is going to remove a lot of variables torque sticks create, but even using torque sticks is better than the "crank 'em on with the impact and call it good" method.
I'm not a torque nazi, but the mentality of "blast them on with an impact gun and call it good because I'm too busy to be arsed with doing it right" is...questionable. Lug nuts are easy to get close enough by hand, but when you're hammering them on with an impact capable of 650lb-ft torque and disregarding the problems that can cause "because I just don't have the time for that" when the alternative method of doing it correctly takes less time than it does to take a piss, it goes beyond just being lazy and borders on incompetence.

What I've always been told about torque wrenches is that without knowing a lot of other variables - materials, surface treatment (antiseize, thread locker, etc), they're more for consistency and rough order of magnitude torque than anything else. Critical applications (that I've seen) always use torque + angle, or TTY fasteners. I've also seen some torque-indicating fasteners, but not often (mostly outside the scope of what I test). That said, a torque wrench is going to remove a lot of variables torque sticks create, but even using torque sticks is better than the "crank 'em on with the impact and call it good" method.
I'm not a torque nazi, but the mentality of "blast them on with an impact gun and call it good because I'm too busy to be arsed with doing it right" is...questionable. Lug nuts are easy to get close enough by hand, but when you're hammering them on with an impact capable of 650lb-ft torque and disregarding the problems that can cause "because I just don't have the time for that" when the alternative method of doing it correctly takes less time than it does to take a piss, it goes beyond just being lazy and borders on incompetence.
I mostly agree, but the discussion is too black/white... would you call a mechanic incompetent because he didn't use a torque wrench for every fastener that has a torque spec? Where do you draw the line...
I'm sure you don't spend the equivalent of 3.6 days slugging coffee or bullshitting with other mechanics during the year, right?
Who needs to do the job right when that takes time? This thread pretty well reinforces why so many people think of mechanics as nothing but hack crooks.
I'm not a torque nazi, but the mentality of "blast them on with an impact gun and call it good because I'm too busy to be arsed with doing it right" is...questionable. Lug nuts are easy to get close enough by hand, but when you're hammering them on with an impact capable of 650lb-ft torque and disregarding the problems that can cause "because I just don't have the time for that" when the alternative method of doing it correctly takes less time than it does to take a piss, it goes beyond just being lazy and borders on incompetence.
And hourly is an excuse to be lazy and take your sweet *** time doing anything.

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A wheel can be attached with a range of 70-200 ft.lbs, with no change it performance (ie; falling off). ...
Wheel doesn't fall off, studs/lugs aren't damaged. IE: Job done right. When I do occasionally torque wheels (upon customer request), I'm pretty close.
Who is advocating for 650? Guns have variable triggers for a reason.
ZING (sends the nut down the threads to contact the mating surface), Brap brump, tightens it within reason. Like, 100ish.
Warped rotors or warped hubs while driving, seized lug nuts or snapped lugs the next time the tire comes off. No chance for damage, right?
Have you ever actually measured the torque applied at that gun setting?
I've had to replace a $250 set of rotors because a ******* blasted lugs on with an impact, so I tend to be a bit more careful with lug nut torque.
Studs do not snap because of over torque when removing. They snap because someone cross threaded it when they put it on. Big difference
I don't buy the warped hub or rotor argument either. It's just not logical for a lugnut to be able to warp a rotor
WhiffySpark said:And most guns don't have 650 ft lbs of FORWARD torque. That's reverse torque.
I apologize for forward torque. Where did you find mg725 forward torque? I could have sworn it was something like 375 ft lbs
But I'm not buying your warped argument. We do hundreds of cars a month and I have yet to see it. But according to GJ there's so such thing as warped rotors so the point is mute. Lol
All my torque wrenches are currently at the calibration shop. I'm paying fifty apiece to CALIBRATE them.New 1/2"Torque wrenches at Amazon for $40-50.That will have to be the subject for a new thread.
and that plastic coil hose at 1/4" diameter.The torque sticks work much better with PVC air lines.
Shop I bought my last tires at used the damned torque sticks. They tell every customer to come back within 50 miles to "re-check". They KNOW the torque stick isn't acceptable, but this policy puts the liability on the customer. Crooks.The local Discount Tire franchise uses a stick while the car is in the air and finishes with a torque wrench after the car is down. The franchise owner has made it clear that if anyone doesn't do it that way, they're fired.
I used to think I could do that...when I had a worn-out CP, or even when I moved-up to a Blue-Point 500.My mechanic demonstrated how he could use his gun to torque my lug nuts to 80-90 foot pounds by feel. I was impressed. He said, "I've been doing this for 35 years."
Good plan.I'm an amateur. I'll use a torque wrench.
Load of ****. The photo posted earlier showing the wear/warpage/thickness variation is worth a thousand of those articles.Good article debunking Warped Rotors:
http://www.stoptech.com/technical-support/technical-white-papers/-warped-brake-disc-and-other-myths
I went from a Blue-Point 500 to an IM510B that I bought used 'n' abused. Woof. Just f'n Woof.When we moved up from a cheap impact wrench to a Snap-On IM510 27 years ago, the first wheel I put on I snapped the studs like nothing.
A torque stick is a torsion bar. Repeat until it sinks in. Torsion bar.Actually, the torque stick should be more accurate than any torque wrench as it's based upon the hard and fast physical properties of a metal alloy. The only variable is the diameter of the torque stick and with modern CNC machines this is good to 0.0001 of an inch. If the spring steel from which the torque stick is made is right there is very little that can go wrong. A lot of things can and do go out of whack in a torque wrench.
Warped rotors or warped hubs while driving, seized lug nuts or snapped lugs the next time the tire comes off. No chance for damage, right?
Have you ever actually measured the torque applied at that gun setting?
I've had to replace a $250 set of rotors because a ******* blasted lugs on with an impact, so I tend to be a bit more careful with lug nut torque.
But I'm not buying your warped argument. We do hundreds of cars a month and I have yet to see it. But according to GJ there's so such thing as warped rotors so the point is mute. Lol

Watch them fasten the lug nuts at Costco !
The installer tightens them down using an impact and a torque stick. Then he double checks them with a torque wrench. Then A DIFFERENT SERVICE TECH checks them with a DIFFERENT TORQUE WRENCH.
Triple checked !
If they're over-torqued and any corrosion occurs on the threads, the breakaway torque necessary to crack the nut loose can exceed the shear strength of the lug...thus, broken lug nut.
The physics of how overtightened lug nuts can cause warped rotors was explained pages back. Over-torqued or unevenly torqued lug nuts can act as stress risers during thermal cycles (heating and cooling of the rotor). causing uneven expansion and contraction of the rotor, which leads to warping.
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I fail to see how the clamp force on the top hat is going to affect the runout of the friction surface.
There is a lot of variation that can cause a pulsation in the pedal, the tightness of the lug nut has nothing to do with it, as I've torqued one side of the wheels with a $600 Snap-on torque wrench and my coworker blasted the lugs on the other side with an IR2135ti, no vibration even after 1 year. Did this on multiple vehicles during tire seasons never had any comebacks for brake pulsation that wasn't caused by a worn out, seized or defective part (seen quite a few brand new rotors out of round right out of the box).
It doesn't matter if the lugs are torque to spec or overtorqued, as long as they're torqued evenly, wheels don't fall off and it can be removed with the stock tire wrench, then its done right.
Any idea how many foot pounds of force it takes to warp a rotor?
I've heard this for years, never seen it, or heard of it outside of theory. Wouldn't the hub surface require serious imperfections to force/load the rotor hat to flex that much? That, or wildly skewed torque between lugs? Maybe 500 ft/lbs on one lug, and the rest at 65?
You can't "check" a fastener with a torque wrench. So these extra steps do nothing.
How would this cover you in the event a wheel fell off?