the reason I bought my Craftsman torque wrench 19 years ago, was because an engine builder/ teacher of mine said they were good and you could send them in to be calibrated.
Fast forward and I don't use mine that much so I haven't thought about it.. I did a quick google search and came up with this.. not sure about it though..
http://www.searscalibration.com/calibration-services-test-measurement-equipment.html
the reason I bought my Craftsman torque wrench 19 years ago, was because an engine builder/ teacher of mine said they were good and you could send them in to be calibrated.
Fast forward and I don't use mine that much so I haven't thought about it.. I did a quick google search and came up with this.. not sure about it though..
http://www.searscalibration.com/calibration-services-test-measurement-equipment.html
the reason I bought my Craftsman torque wrench 19 years ago, was because an engine builder/ teacher of mine said they were good and you could send them in to be calibrated.
Fast forward and I don't use mine that much so I haven't thought about it.. I did a quick google search and came up with this.. not sure about it though..
http://www.searscalibration.com/calibration-services-test-measurement-equipment.html

This has changed tremendously in the past 10 years as more manufacturers and service companies recognize the value in being able to PROVE they follow procedures and specifications.To be honest, outside of Government agencies where they track calibrations, I've never seen anyone calibrate their torque wrenches. Hell I rarely saw a tech in a dealership ever use a torque wrench![]()
I have a few tech angles I bought off ebay. I suspect they are accurate, is there anyone besides Snap On who checks these?
Does Angle Repair include a calibration certificate?
A number of places do, but from what I've seen, Snap On does it the cheapest.
Any idea on what it cost?
For the professionals it only makes sense to pay for having it done. For me, a part timer working on my own machines, I have several beam wrenches and I regularly set the clickers to what I aiming for and then check it against the beam before using.
I am always working on stuff that calls for a torque ratings of 22 to 24 ft/lbs or 80 to 85 ft/lbs. I have never run into anything that I needed an exact torque setting for. For which I would need a more accurate wrench.
I asked a Snap On truck guy and he said checking Snap On wrenches was free. Adjustment may be more?
Beams don't go out of calibration but the published specs on a lot of them are not exactly calibration standard to start with. 4% is typical. The standard should be a lot better than what is being calibrated. I seem to recall something about one decimal place.I did my clickers at home. Only one was off. I used an SK beam as the standard.