You really should post a tutorial, I'm sure some of us would be interested in learning from a different perspective.
Might be easier if you asked a question. Here are a couple quick thoughts. Ask away.
Before you torque:
1) Exercise torque wrench at target torque approx 6-8 times for mechanical clicker types.
2) make sure mating surfaces are clean, dirt and burr fee, washers are installed correctly (stamped washers have right and wrong sides).
3) correct lubricants have been applied to threads, mating surfaces etc. Remember there no such thing as a dry torque value.
4) determine what to torque, head or tail, bolt or nut. Know how to choose.
5) find correct values, specifications, tolerances
6) know your wrench's capabilities, calibration status, etc
In use:
1) determine prevailing torque. Very important!
2) apply correct torque pattern if applicable
3) adjust target torque to correct for prevailing torque if necessary. Torque angle requirements are designed to eliminate this step.
4) compensate for flex head, extension, deep socket use.
Very important techniques:
5) target value must be achieved in a single continuous pull at least 1/4 turn.
6) target torque must be reached slowly and torque stopped just as wrench begins to click, not after wrench clicks and limits torque through release. This results in over torquing.
7) depending on part, target torque may need to be achieved by bringing all fasteners in the pattern up to a lower target torque before applying the installation torque.
We torque fasteners to produce preload produced by placing the fastener system in tension. Think of each fastener as a really stiff spring. As engineers, we specify torque requirements solely to produce preload. But torque wrenches don't measure preload. And they don't even do a good job of getting close. Different studies show different percentages but some indicate up to 40% of the torque we apply is consumed by friction in the threads. An additional 40% can be consumed under the head. That means roughly 20% of the torque we apply actually does what engineers require. This also means it's virtually pointless to use a torque wrench without controlling friction (prevailing torque).