... never mind, read your initial post wrong.
There are a couple schools of thought on storage. I've read that you should take it down to it's lowest torque setting, others say to back it all the way off. Not sure the right answer but once we drilled into the guys heads to NOT leave them set at torque the number of wrenches coming back out of calibration every year dropped sharply.
We had to store at lowest setting in the Air Force.
Even then, had plenty that couldn't hold +-5% torque.
Snap On was HORRIBLE for that for some reason. Even brand new, many weren't able to meet calibration specs.
Crazy enough, the cheap Crafstman units ($40ish) were usually fine and held up well.
Many of my torque wrenches are throw away from work.
I figured a torque wrench that was maybe +-7% or 10% was still better than no torque wrench.
Most of the time I'm after even torque with multiple fasteners and it's not as much about hitting an exact number.