Fuzzydog
Active member
the "rotate your own tires" thread got me thinking about this.
I have always used a somewhat ancient torque wrench that deflects and has a needle pointing to the applied torque. - no clicking, no mechanical parts and that suits me just fine, and here is why.....
friend has a 99 new beetle that needed a timing belt change, which we are competent to do (some might argue that, but....) The thing of it is, that the timing belt actually goes around the passenger side motor mount so you have to remove the mount to remove the belt. (side note - I will NEVER buy a new beetle because they built the body then crammed stuff in where it would fit- not mechanic friendly)
This motor mount is 2 huge pieces of aluminum, attached with 1 time use stretch bolts. Anyway we do the job, get the new belt in, reinstall the motor mount with new stretch bolts. friend gets out his handy dandy super cadillac snap on torque wrench and sets to the proper torque and away we go......hmmm....that seems to be awfully hard for that amount of torque and still no click when suddenly it turns very easily.....ooops!
turns out his torque wrench picked that time to fail and he ended up stripping out the alum engine mount. turned into a very costly repair (new motor mount) AND when he talked to snap on about it they would not warranty the torque wrench.
I'll stick to my basic deflection type torque wrench - I'm only using it for auto repairs - not building the space shuttle.
I have always used a somewhat ancient torque wrench that deflects and has a needle pointing to the applied torque. - no clicking, no mechanical parts and that suits me just fine, and here is why.....
friend has a 99 new beetle that needed a timing belt change, which we are competent to do (some might argue that, but....) The thing of it is, that the timing belt actually goes around the passenger side motor mount so you have to remove the mount to remove the belt. (side note - I will NEVER buy a new beetle because they built the body then crammed stuff in where it would fit- not mechanic friendly)
This motor mount is 2 huge pieces of aluminum, attached with 1 time use stretch bolts. Anyway we do the job, get the new belt in, reinstall the motor mount with new stretch bolts. friend gets out his handy dandy super cadillac snap on torque wrench and sets to the proper torque and away we go......hmmm....that seems to be awfully hard for that amount of torque and still no click when suddenly it turns very easily.....ooops!
turns out his torque wrench picked that time to fail and he ended up stripping out the alum engine mount. turned into a very costly repair (new motor mount) AND when he talked to snap on about it they would not warranty the torque wrench.
I'll stick to my basic deflection type torque wrench - I'm only using it for auto repairs - not building the space shuttle.

