CISO1969
Well-known member
Excuse the spelling. I have seen the name of these Torque wrench/tools spelled different ways.
I have one of these from Matco or maybe Blue Point, but it is essentially the same tool that Snap-on makes.
Looks like a small cricket bat with a meter on top for torque. How the heck do you use this thing?
My guess is to set to sero, then place the scoket onto the nut and turn until the needle hits the right torque? Problem is there are two needles one that gets moved and stays--I'm assuming thats to show what torque it hit if you arent looking?
Does this sound right to those who know how to use this thing?
I bought it because I felt it would be more sensitive when tightening my spark plugs. I prefer to set the torque specs when I know them, nothing drives me nuts more than working with a guy who tightens until it cant be tightened anymore with an impact or ratchet and calls it done. Sometimes that could be quite a few foot pounds more then called for making it hard to remove or messing things up (fatiguing the bolt or stripping threads etc)
Anyway, any insight into this interesting tool much appreciated.
CISO
I have one of these from Matco or maybe Blue Point, but it is essentially the same tool that Snap-on makes.
Looks like a small cricket bat with a meter on top for torque. How the heck do you use this thing?
My guess is to set to sero, then place the scoket onto the nut and turn until the needle hits the right torque? Problem is there are two needles one that gets moved and stays--I'm assuming thats to show what torque it hit if you arent looking?
Does this sound right to those who know how to use this thing?
I bought it because I felt it would be more sensitive when tightening my spark plugs. I prefer to set the torque specs when I know them, nothing drives me nuts more than working with a guy who tightens until it cant be tightened anymore with an impact or ratchet and calls it done. Sometimes that could be quite a few foot pounds more then called for making it hard to remove or messing things up (fatiguing the bolt or stripping threads etc)
Anyway, any insight into this interesting tool much appreciated.
CISO