I have an application where I need to attach and remove a long hex bolt with some frequency that engages a mechanism that cannot handle a lot of torque (I believe the tightening spec is around 3 NM or roughly 2.21 ft-lbs). I'm fine with doing the final tightening by hand with a torque wrench, but removal by hand is pretty tedious. I would like to use my electric impact driver for removal, the problem is if I were to accidentally put the impact driver in forward instead of reverse I could over torque the mechanism and damage it.
Is there a ratcheting attachment for impact drivers that would only allow for rotation in one direction? That way in the event that I accidentally set the driver to forward it would just spin, but if I set the driver to reverse it would turn the bit? I know the easy answer is to just be careful to make sure the driver is in reverse, but mistakes happen and I don't trust myself to not make that mistake.
I thought about getting a separate weaker powered screwdriver for this task, but it seems like a waste considering I already have an impact driver. I know there are "torque sticks" that prevent overtightening but I'm not sure I could get them for such a low torque.
Is there a ratcheting attachment for impact drivers that would only allow for rotation in one direction? That way in the event that I accidentally set the driver to forward it would just spin, but if I set the driver to reverse it would turn the bit? I know the easy answer is to just be careful to make sure the driver is in reverse, but mistakes happen and I don't trust myself to not make that mistake.
I thought about getting a separate weaker powered screwdriver for this task, but it seems like a waste considering I already have an impact driver. I know there are "torque sticks" that prevent overtightening but I'm not sure I could get them for such a low torque.
