So I went to HF today and picked up one of the Quinn strain gauges listed above to test the 5 Tq wrenches I have.
3/8" Craftsman 25-250 in/lb that is 8-9 yrs old and never calibrated
3/8 Craftsman 10-75 ft/lb that is well over 20yo and never calibrated
1/2" Craftsman 20-150 ft/lbs that may be over 35 yo and never calibrated and I retired to tq lug nuts
1/2" Proto 30-150 ft/lbs that I've had
I set it up with head studs Tq to 80# so the wrench should click off and the strain gauge will read the highest reading. I tested all of them at least 3 times
First the in/# I set to 60 in/# and got 5ft/lbs with the Quinn strain gauge
3/8" Craftsman ft/lbs I set to 20 and got 20 exactly at least 3x, this is the one I thought was heavy
1/2" Craftsman ft/lbs that was retired to lug nuts set to 50 and spot on
1/2" Quinn digital that I bought just to do heavy stuff set to 50 and got 48-50 every time
The high end Proto which is the only one I had calibrated set to 50 I got 58-59.
I also just went through a whole ordeal with stretching rod bolts with this wrench and now that I know it is 8-10# heavy it makes perfect sense and is within the torque and stretch which the rod bolt manufacturer was telling me. I switched rod bolts over this and really didn't need to.
Apparently my cheap **** is pretty good and I think that Quinn strain gauge is spot on too. I am going to give my Proto to my machinist to have it calibrated and re-check it. I am also going to check my buddies expensive snap on which I think he has had calibrated a few times
To keep this bike related, my last bike build in 2019 and still my daily when I still ride. It was a little over 16# like it was in pic #2 with no light.