l_bilyk
Well-known member
Discuss the pros and cons. Split beam doesn't go out of calibration as easily as far as i know. But is it any less accurate?

Big_John said:Beam type wrenches are usually +/- 4% of reading accuracy.
Click types are either +/-4% or +/-4% Clockwise and +/-6% Counter Clockwise.
The beam types do have an advantage in that they are usually cheaper and more reliable. The clicker type is easier to use, but you really need to have them calibrated on a regular basis. :
Charles (in GA) said:The vast majority of the beam type ones I've seen were warranted to be accurate to within 2% (even the Craftsman ones).
The man who calibrates our torque wrenches at work (hundreds of them for a major airline) says that by far, the beam type is more accurate and tends to stay that way. Second to that is a dial type, esentially a bending beam inside a rigid housing hooked to a dial.
Clickers vary alot in quality and accuracy, so he told me.
Charles
Fast Orange said:If you can get a good,straight-on view of the indicator on a split-beam,they can be very accurate.However,the graduations are pretty fine,the user has often got a little "shake" going on,so there is a lot of room for operator error.
For these reasons,I much prefer a quality "clicker".Unless you are using it often and at the top of the range,with proper care and storage,you might never need to get it calibrated.
One word of advice-NEVER-NEVER loan a torque wrench to ANYONE. If you have to,do the torqueing for them-just NEVER let anyone use the tool out of your sight and guidance.How can you have confidance in a tool that there is no way to verify it's accurracy short of sending it out ,when you don't know what someone else did to/with it?
George
Eastwood just came out with a line of torque wrenches. From all indications, they are the split beam type. They look like a clicker with rotary adjustment but they only work clockwise and don't have to be turned down after use to preserve accuracy. They claim 3% of full scale accuracy, down to 20% and the lowest reading is 20% of the highest so the whole scale should be usable. That is the advertising. Has anyone actually used one?
I usually have my hands and torque wrench in a confined area where I don't think it would be practical to have a beam type in my line of sight.