ZRX61
Well-known member
I have 6:
3 Craftsman
2 Lexivon
1 Norbar (now owned by SnapOn)
That covers everything up to 250ft/lb
3 Craftsman
2 Lexivon
1 Norbar (now owned by SnapOn)
That covers everything up to 250ft/lb
Wrong. Grip location absolutely does matter on those style wrenches.Oh good. You're back.
For a clicker type or split beam, it doesn't matter where you grip it.
What about stripping the female threads of the thing you are threading the fastener into? I stripped the female threads of my transmission pan by overtorqueing the drain plug bolt.That's not how it works, or rather, should work. In any properly engineered bolted joint, you will fail the fastener (fracture or yield) before you strip any threads.
That's what I think happened to my ****** pan, I overtorqued it two times ago, and it was perfectly fine. And then when I did another drain and fill a few weeks later, the drain plug wouldn't thread back in properly.If you slightly overtorque, the risk is that you will sometimes go slightly into yield. While not desirable, it's usually very low risk, because in a properly designed joint ,the failure will be that you permanently stretch the fastener and have to replace it next time.
Prove it!Wrong. Grip location absolutely does matter on those style wrenches.
Say more.Best and cheapest way is buy the HF Quinn 1/2" digital wrench with angle for like $100 with a coupon. This wrench is made by Eclatorq in Taiwan and is one of the best digital torque wrench companies on Earth as I sell their higher end stuff which is identical to the digital torque wrenches sold by MAC, Proto and the rest of SB&D as well as NAPA Carlyle. No, you don't need to spend $2000 on Techangles and angle in any wrench under 1/2 capacity typically is a waste as it doesn't have sufficient range to finish the final angle as that torque value almost always exceeds 100 ft-lb which is the 3/8" drive limit. Tools Tested on YouTube did a review of the Quinn and he was highly impressed with his results.
I have a digital craftsman clicker. It's basically an encoder keeping track of how many times I've spun the knob on the end. So not all "digital" are like that.Say more.
For everybody else, digital torque wrenches are basically strain gages. There is no release mechanism. ...
Yes you can use it like a breaker bar. You can turn it until the ratchet shears off or the handle bends. You can put a 10 foot cheater bar and a 400 lb gorilla on the end of it...Say more.
For everybody else, digital torque wrenches are basically strain gages. There is no release mechanism. So a digital wrench that measures torque from 5-100ftlbs say, doesn’t do anything at 100ftlbs besides beep and vibrate. My guess is, you could use a 3/8” torque wrench to the limit of the ratchet.
But I could be wrong. Tell me more. If I torque to 80ftlbs with a 3/8” wrench what stops me from turning 180? Would thss as t be over 200ftlbs say? What sets the limit?
In the case of Eclatorq, and I suppose many others, the tool will go into an over range error mode that can only be reset with special software and a special cable. So yes, you can do it, but as they say: "You'll be sorry."Say more.
For everybody else, digital torque wrenches are basically strain gages. There is no release mechanism. So a digital wrench that measures torque from 5-100ftlbs say, doesn’t do anything at 100ftlbs besides beep and vibrate. My guess is, you could use a 3/8” torque wrench to the limit of the ratchet.
But I could be wrong. Tell me more. If I torque to 80ftlbs with a 3/8” wrench what stops me from turning 180? Would thss as t be over 200ftlbs say? What sets the limit?
Thread engagement is key. If you have enough thread engagement such that it's 2x the diameter of the fastener, it shouldn't strip even in aluminum.What about stripping the female threads of the thing you are threading the fastener into? I stripped the female threads of my transmission pan by overtorqueing the drain plug bolt.
Thanks. This is new to me. Appreciate you.In the case of Eclatorq, and I suppose many others, the tool will go into an over range error mode that can only be reset with special software and a special cable. So yes, you can do it, but as they say: "You'll be sorry."
A torque wrench with angle has both torque and angle so why would you ever need another torque wrench?Thanks. This is new to me. Appreciate you.
Found this very old thread on the subject with your comments.
Kinda hoping when engineers specify angles, they know what those angles translate to in ftlbs and they would know what wrench would or would not work. Such that they don’t specify a torque and an angle that requires 2 different wrenches.
I guess being an aircraft person, I’m gonna be on this page. I totally get and respect the notion that k factor has such a huge effect on fastener strain for a given applied torque. Every Hohn said is true and I’ve been at least partly around this block before (we don’t use angles, and all repairs, mods get new or restored hardware).Thread engagement is key. If you have enough thread engagement such that it's 2x the diameter of the fastener, it shouldn't strip even in aluminum.
But in thin things like pans, you often don't get enough thickness to do a "proper" threaded joint so you can indeed strip out the female threads.
Drain plugs are one of those things where it's obviously better to risk undertighten a little since the failure mode is just a drip or seep unless it's so loose that it falls out.
Maybe I misread your post here.A torque wrench with angle has both torque and angle so why would you ever need another torque wrench?
That's not me. Sorry.Maybe I misread your post here.
What it sounded like was, if you had a TTA spec of 60ftlbs + 180, you probably couldn’t finish that job with a 3/8” techangle wrench. So you’d either just do the whole job with a 1/2”, or you’d do the torque with a clicker, and finish with a 1/2” techangle (or whatever).
Did I misunderstand?
Sorry misread the usernames. Got you mixed up with @dnschmidt
hopefully this answered your question
Why can't you do a 60 + 180 with a 3/8 torque wrench with angle?Maybe I misread your post here.
What it sounded like was, if you had a TTA spec of 60ftlbs + 180, you probably couldn’t finish that job with a 3/8” techangle wrench. So you’d either just do the whole job with a 1/2”, or you’d do the torque with a clicker, and finish with a 1/2” techangle (or whatever).
Did I misunderstand?
Sorry misread the usernames. Got you mixed up with @dnschmidt
hopefully this answered your question
Why can't you do a 60 + 180 with a 3/8 torque wrench with angle?
Again, I don't own one, so this may already be handled by the wrench company...If you go to 60 ft-lb and then turn an additional 180 degrees you'll be at >150 ft-lb in a heartbeat and that will put the 3/8" wrench into error mode from which at least Eclatorq forces you to have it reset and re-calibrated.
Snap on has this, yes.Again, I don't own one, so this may already be handled by the wrench company...
Is there a warning (light/beep/etc) that you are getting close to exceeding specs? Wondering if it could flash a "warning" light, and also let you know you have already gone X degrees, so theoretically (assuming space/access/etc) you could go up a size and do basic math (total-deg travelled) to finish with a higher capacity wrench?
Oh I see what y'all are saying. I didn't and still don't know what any of these torque wrench ranges are since I don't own any.Not any of the above people (and I don't own a Techangle), but I did sleep in a Holiday Inn once...
My understanding is that the 60 (guessing ft lbs) would be fine, but if the 180 (guessing deg?) exceeds the maximum torque the wrench is calibrated for, it will freak out the electronic guts and then go into "limp" mode afterwards, until you give it to someone with the magic cable to reset it.
The worry with some people/wrenches being is that the angle portion puts an unknown amount of torque into it, and can exceed max ranges. Or it could be fine, but you don't know until you went "too far" (torque, not angle).
They are similar to clicker ranges:Oh I see what y'all are saying. I didn't and still don't know what any of these torque wrench ranges are since I don't own any.
I gotcha. Thanks for that.They are similar to clicker ranges:
3/8 5-80 or 100ftlbs
1/2” 20-250ftlbs
To help summarize this thread:
For clicker type torque wrenches most manufacturers suggest the bottom 20% of the range is not super accurate. So the real usable range is more like:
3/8” 20-80 or 100ftlbs
1/2” 50-250ftlbs
The takeaway is, you really need both wrenches to cover the majority of automotive requirements. You can’t/shouldn’t really use your 1/2” torque wrench for 10-50ftlbs. Thats 3/8” territory.
What I brought up is the growing prevalence of Torque To Angle or TTA requirements on automobiles. (note: This is NOT the same as TTY or “torque to yield”, but the two often converge.
There are many practical methods used to meet a TTA requirement. The latest generation of digital torque wrenches are able to measure angles, even if the wrench is ratcheted, using an internal gyroscope.
Another advantage of these wrenches is they are generally accurate throughout their entire range.
One thing to watch out for however (which I just learned) is that the electronic strain gage that measures torque can be over strained. So while their upper torque limit remains consistent with the manufacturers specs, one cannot simply add an additional angle on top of a high torque. Doing so would over torque the strain gage.
Snap On models have a warning buzzer and tone to signal an impending over torque event. But in terms of “Torque wrench ranges”, the effect of over torque may limit the practical range of a digital torque wrench if an angle is specified.
They are similar to clicker ranges:
3/8 5-80 or 100ftlbs
1/2” 20-250ftlbs
To help summarize this thread:
For clicker type torque wrenches most manufacturers suggest the bottom 20% of the range is not super accurate. So the real usable range is more like:
3/8” 20-80 or 100ftlbs
1/2” 50-250ftlbs
Maria, is that you? Didn’t know my wife joined GJ!Pretty sure that was covered earlier and you have it wrong.
It's a bit difficult to explain. One thing to keep in mind is that most torque wrenches don't actually directly measure the torque applied, they measure the flex at the mechanism, which on most wrenches is off-center, whether it's mechanical or electronic. X amount of flex corresponds to Y torque when the reaction force (your hand) is at the proper location. But when your hand is incorrectly located, it changes the whole equation. In general, moving your hand closer to the head of the wrench will make the applied torque higher than calibrated, and moving it further from the head will make it lower. It changes when the wrench clicks.Prove it!
I've never been able to comprehend why hand placement matters for torque application. I always figured it only changes the human effort to achieve it.It's a bit difficult to explain. One thing to keep in mind is that most torque wrenches don't actually directly measure the torque applied, they measure the flex at the mechanism, which on most wrenches is off-center, whether it's mechanical or electronic. X amount of flex corresponds to Y torque when the reaction force (your hand) is at the proper location. But when your hand is incorrectly located, it changes the whole equation. In general, moving your hand closer to the head of the wrench will make the applied torque higher than calibrated, and moving it further from the head will make it lower. It changes when the wrench clicks.
Honestly, I wouldn't have believed it either, but back when I calibrated torque wrenches for a living I saw it firsthand.
You are correct, it is the same if you are talking about, say, a breaker bar. However, a torque wrench is different. The mechanism that "clicks" is not directly at the center of rotation, it is offset. Because of that offset, when you move your hand it changes the length of pull on the mechanism. Remember, the mechanism is not directly measuring torque, it is measuring the force required to make torque. By changing the length of that force, it changes the torque level the wrench "clicks" at.I've never been able to comprehend why hand placement matters for torque application. I always figured it only changes the human effort to achieve it.
For example, 100 lbs applied to a 2 foot bar is 200 lb-ft of force. 50 lbs applied to a 4 foot bar is also 200 lb-ft of force.
Putting 100lbs halfway down the handle of a 4 foot bar (or at the 2 foot mark) is not the same as putting 50lbs at the end of the same bar?
If not, why?
No one torques a bolt by pressing down directly on the head of the torque wrench.You are correct, it is the same if you are talking about, say, a breaker bar. However, a torque wrench is different. The mechanism that "clicks" is not directly at the center of rotation, it is offset. Because of that offset, when you move your hand it changes the length of pull on the mechanism. Remember, the mechanism is not directly measuring torque, it is measuring the force required to make torque. By changing the length of that force, it changes the torque level the wrench "clicks" at.
I'm no artist, but I wish I could make a drawing about it. It would probably help you understand.
Just thought of a visual example: if you took your torque wrench, set it for say, 100 ft. lb., put it on a bolt, and hung a 1000 lb. weight on it directly below the head, would it click?
You'd hope that was true, but you'd be surprised how many engineers have never turned a wrench.Kinda hoping when engineers specify angles, they know what those angles translate to in ftlbs and they would know what wrench would or would not work. Such that they don’t specify a torque and an angle that requires 2 different wrenches.
You are correct, it is the same if you are talking about, say, a breaker bar. However, a torque wrench is different. The mechanism that "clicks" is not directly at the center of rotation, it is offset. Because of that offset, when you move your hand it changes the length of pull on the mechanism. Remember, the mechanism is not directly measuring torque, it is measuring the force required to make torque. By changing the length of that force, it changes the torque level the wrench "clicks" at.
I'm no artist, but I wish I could make a drawing about it. It would probably help you understand.
Just thought of a visual example: if you took your torque wrench, set it for say, 100 ft. lb., put it on a bolt, and hung a 1000 lb. weight on it directly below the head, would it click?
I just did a quick YouTube search and found this video. I didn't watch the whole thing, I will when I get home from work.If the clicking mechanism was directly at the center of rotation, it would never click, because the moment arm would be zero, and the resulting torque would also be zero regardless of the force applied. As you seemed to understand with your last rhetorical question.
The clicking mechanism only sees a moment-- the product of force and distance. Often this distance is fixed and adjusting the torque set point only changes the force requires to overcome the static friction and activate the click.
Which is why the hand placement does NOT matter. Your hand is applying torque to the outside of the wrench. The internal click mechanism is responding to *reaction* torque-- equal in magnitude (force times distance) and opposite in direction.
The mechanism can't see the constituent components of the input torque, it can only see the reaction torque. Which is why 100lb at 2ft is the same as 50lb at 4ft or 200lb at one foot. It is exactly the same as a bolt not knowing how long a breaker bar you used-- it just sees the total torque and is unable to tell what combination of force and distance produced it.
Hmmm, no. Your hand applies a force. The resultant moment at the release mechanism is the key. The device is calibrated to compare the applied torque to the output torque, so hand position DOES matter. Torque wrenches aren't SUPER sensitive tho. The device will work if you grip wherever you want. But it will be most accurate if you grip where the manufacturer indicates.If the clicking mechanism was directly at the center of rotation, it would never click, because the moment arm would be zero, and the resulting torque would also be zero regardless of the force applied. As you seemed to understand with your last rhetorical question.
The clicking mechanism only sees a moment-- the product of force and distance. Often this distance is fixed and adjusting the torque set point only changes the force requires to overcome the static friction and activate the click.
Which is why the hand placement does NOT matter. Your hand is applying torque to the outside of the wrench. The internal click mechanism is responding to *reaction* torque-- equal in magnitude (force times distance) and opposite in direction.
The mechanism can't see the constituent components of the input torque, it can only see the reaction torque. Which is why 100lb at 2ft is the same as 50lb at 4ft or 200lb at one foot. It is exactly the same as a bolt not knowing how long a breaker bar you used-- it just sees the total torque and is unable to tell what combination of force and distance produced it.
Don't love the snarky old know it all vibe (especially this one):I just did a quick YouTube search and found this video. I didn't watch the whole thing, I will when I get home from work.
The explanation in the video "clicked" for me and with this style of wrench I would agree that position matters.I just did a quick YouTube search and found this video. I didn't watch the whole thing, I will when I get home from work.
Agree it’s not instantly intuitive.The explanation in the video "clicked" for me and with this style of wrench I would agree that position matters.
In my mind I was thinking more of a split beam style wrench. But now I'm questioning as to whether the split beam would also have hand position matter?
I think the beam parts in the split beam are tangent to the rotating part and may not be hand sensitive.