oldschoolcraft
Well-known member
I plan on reviewing the science/physics of torque this week for fun. One thing I always wondered is, whether a certain tool is truly needed or if the torque generated will be so high that it will shear the fastener.
And in some cases, the fastener is so seized, that removing it might exceed the threshold of the tool.
For examples, suppose you have a seized fastener and put a 3/8" long reach ratchet on it. You might snap the anvil on the ratchet. Whereas maybe a 3/8 breaker bar can sustain more torque than the ratchet, and could have broken it for you.
I guess this doesnt matter too much to professional mechanics where it's better to occasionally break a tool and warranty it, rather than constantly change tools out of fear of breaking one, and wasting time. Time = money. But for me, I am not a pro, and I might be able to warranty something in a week or two, but I only have one car and I need to fix it right now, and if my tool breaks I'm kind of screwed.
So what I'd like to find some rough calculations or estimations for:
Part of this is fun to review science, but part of is to figure out "when should I change tools?" and also "how many tools do I really need?" Also maybe once I have a better understanding of torque numbers, I can watch Project Farm and have it be more meaningful to me.
There's a second issue, one of access, whereby maybe you want a longer tool for better access, not necessarily more torque. So of course, we need every possible sized tool that exists even if it might shear the fastener if used to max possible torque, because of access.
And in some cases, the fastener is so seized, that removing it might exceed the threshold of the tool.
For examples, suppose you have a seized fastener and put a 3/8" long reach ratchet on it. You might snap the anvil on the ratchet. Whereas maybe a 3/8 breaker bar can sustain more torque than the ratchet, and could have broken it for you.
I guess this doesnt matter too much to professional mechanics where it's better to occasionally break a tool and warranty it, rather than constantly change tools out of fear of breaking one, and wasting time. Time = money. But for me, I am not a pro, and I might be able to warranty something in a week or two, but I only have one car and I need to fix it right now, and if my tool breaks I'm kind of screwed.
So what I'd like to find some rough calculations or estimations for:
- How much torque before you shear the bolt head off a bolt, for various sized bolts?
- How much torque before you deform a bolt when you put too much torque on a nut?
- How much torque before you break the anvil on a ratchet? I think there's ANSI standards, and I have seen Project Farm videos where he tests different ratchets.
- How much torque before you break the anvil on a breaker bar?
- How long of a cheater pipe can I add to something before I'm just going to shear the bolt off or break the tool anyway?
Part of this is fun to review science, but part of is to figure out "when should I change tools?" and also "how many tools do I really need?" Also maybe once I have a better understanding of torque numbers, I can watch Project Farm and have it be more meaningful to me.
There's a second issue, one of access, whereby maybe you want a longer tool for better access, not necessarily more torque. So of course, we need every possible sized tool that exists even if it might shear the fastener if used to max possible torque, because of access.


