^^^who needs a breaker bar to build new equipment?
Well the large machine tools, some were as old as 1982. The ones I typically worked on were made in 1991-93, water based coolant, and for example, some of the fixtures alone weighed in the 40,000 lbs range and the pallet it sat on was about the same. The bolts that attached them together were large and high toque. M19 and M24 allen head cap screws. The worst was the 2" Cam rollers on the bottom of the pallets.
Engines were remanufactured there for a long time, tearing down 3500hp mining truck engines is fun after 20,000 hours of run time, although most of it is done in Corinth Mississippi now. Failures are often brought back in plant and torn down. It wan't uncommon to purchase used competitor engines and tear them down in the plant.
And there is still very large bolts to attach and torque. Some large generator attachment is still done with manual 1" ratchet torque wrenches on 1.5" and 2" bolts. Most of the higher volume stuff on the line/gen attached is done with DC torque tools with reaction bars
There were plenty of manual toque wrenches as well with dual 80 heads on the line as well for lower volume specialized models. Also **** happens, some times you had to remove flywheels due to say a wrong bell housing installed or some one screwed up a thread on the bellhousing.
Smacking anything but a pin punch was highly discouraged. But it was no issue as our tools were not short little things.