In my opinion a torque wrench is one tool you don't want to cheap out on if you really use it. If you're torquing rod bolts and snap one it's not a huge deal. But if you tighten it to the point that it's weakened or if it's too loose and 5k miles later it breaks or backs out, that cheap torque wrench just cost you thousands. Unlikely, maybe, but not impossible. That's not a risk I want to take. There are hundreds of other scenarios where a $500 torque wrench will save you a whole lot of money.
Right, so if a bolt backs out or fails, and you used a cheap torque wrench, it's the wrench's fault, but if you use an expensive one, it's the bolt's fault or a design flaw?
Torque is torque. 20 ft-lbs doesn't have a cost associated with it, and the bolt does not know what wrench was used to apply that torque.
As I pointed out above, only trusting your torque to a $500 or even $5000 torque wrench, is like trusting your time to a Rolex. Out of the store, you have a calibration certificate with it, but that will deviate over time, and I doubt many people here have ways of tracking that deviation.
Anyway, torque wrenches all use a small set of similar mechanisms, and all tend to fail in similar ways.
I didn’t make the comment to start a ******* match. I simply won’t trust a tool that is used to make precision measurements unless it is of the highest quality. My reasoning behind that is pretty good I think.
So let’s say I have 7 hours invested into a job and I’m torquing head bolts down and wrapping things up and uh-oh my 19.99 harbor freight torque wrench wasn’t accurate and a head bolt snaps or it pulls the threads in the block. Now what?
And I’m sure you will say well you should have had it calibrated... ok so who is going to calibrate a harbor freight torque wrench for me without having to pay them? With a Snap on I can step on the truck once a month check to see that it is still accurate and if it isn’t I can send it in and have it calibrated for free for the life of the tool.
Also The Snap On is far more capable than the harbor freight. It will measure ft lbs, in lbs, dnm, and kg-cm. It will also measure degrees turned and will automatically calculate the torque difference for an offset drive tool. And yes I use all of those features regularly.
Maybe the work you do doesn’t require that much precision but either way why take a chance? And why trust a company that produces so much junk and has so many inconsistencies in quality?
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Look, if you want to spend your dollars on Snap On tools (I know I've done that a lot), that's fine with me. I really like their torque wrenches, though I only own their split beam models, and not a Techangle.
However, I feel the need to point out that Snap On torque wrenches only carry a 1 year warranty, and re-calibration is absolutely not free. Certainly not for a lifetime, and as far as I can tell, not even within the warranty period. Your driver has a torque calibrator? That's news to me.
OTOH, Pittsburgh torque wrenches actually do carry a lifetime warranty. Not that the warranty argument carries much weight with a disposable tool.