illmatyk
Well-known member
I was at Home Depot earlier and came across the Husky torque wrench. Just wondering if anybody here has had any experience with them.
(not my auction)The older ones look identical to an older ATD wrench I have, its a great wrench. Nice positive click, not the mushy click like cheaper wrenches.
This just like mine, only different.(not my auction)
http://cgi.ebay.com/HUSKY-TORQUE-WRENCH-39104-W-PROTECTIVE-HARD-CASE-/390210957560?cmd=ViewItem&pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item5ada62b0f8#ht_2841wt_1139
Just to set the record straight I used my impact to tighten the lugs first I was using the husky to torque to 100 ft lbs. Apparently I had held the impact on a few bolts longer than others as such a few needed to be ratcheted (is that a word) in order to get them up to 100 ft lbs.

Am I alone in finding the 3/8" torque wrench setting confusing?
The course markings go, 20-30-40-50-60-70-80-90. Then the dial on the handle says 2-4-6-8-10-12-14-16-18-20.
So when you rotate the handle, you would expect 0 on the handle would line up with 20 on the shaft. Good 20 ft/lbs.
When you rotate the handle to 10...you would expect to see the shaft say 30 ft lbs, but instead it's only half way to 30.
So how are they dividing 20 into 10? How do I set this thing to 22 ft/lbs? Does the shaft go past 20, then set the handle to 2? or 4? What about 35 ft/lbs? Go to 30 and set the handle at 10?
Sorry this might seem easy for some, I just don't get it.
Are you sure you are not confusing the metric scale with the English scale on the tool?
Charles
I have an ATD and a Husky. They were both Danaher (now Apex) wrenches. They were also sold as Craftsman KD,SK, and a few other brands. They were made with a plastic handle or a more durable metal one. The accuracy and the rest of the wrench were the same. I got that info. from a phone discussion with the manufacturer, after the local SK dealer tried to tell me that Danaher built theirs to a higher spec. These days, Apex is making them as Gearwrench and and a little nicer under their top line, Armstrong. I don't know if Gearwrench is still made in USA. I think my next one will be CDI/Snap On.The older ones look identical to an older ATD wrench I have, its a great wrench. Nice positive click, not the mushy click like cheaper wrenches.
This just like mine, only different.(not my auction)
http://cgi.ebay.com/HUSKY-TORQUE-WRENCH-39104-W-PROTECTIVE-HARD-CASE-/390210957560?cmd=ViewItem&pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item5ada62b0f8#ht_2841wt_1139
I'm stupid degrees of paranoid when it comes to something as important as a timing chain, so I own something where 16 ft lb is in the fat part of its range, not the very top or the very bottom.I just picked up Husky 3/8 torque wrench. Dials down to 10ft lbs but according to specs it’s 20’lbs to 100’lbs. it will torque lower than the 20’lbs? Anyone use lower than 20’ lb settings. Doing another timing chain and some bolts supposed to be torqued to 16’lbs
Torque wrench accuracy is typically rated as a percentage of full scale from what I rember, so it won’t be very accurate at the bottom of the scale.I'm stupid degrees of paranoid when it comes to something as important as a timing chain, so I own something where 16 ft lb is in the fat part of its range, not the very top or the very bottom.
I agree with you - did you mean to quote him?Torque wrench accuracy is typically rated as a percentage of full scale from what I rember, so it won’t be very accurate at the bottom of the scale.
It’s the wrong tool to do what you’re proposing.