Hannahranga
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2023
- Messages
- 212
Happy to be proven wrong (preferable digital or click style) but given how good 3/8 stuff is getting why do 3/8 torque wrenches seem to stop at 100lbf?
Do you have a specific use case where a 3/8 is preferable?Happy to be proven wrong (preferable digital or click style) but given how good 3/8 stuff is getting why do 3/8 torque wrenches seem to stop at 100lbf?
Makes sense. I don't have an answer to your original question, I was just wondering.Mostly just trying to keep as much of my stuff 3/8 as I can, understand at some point moving to 1/2 or 3/4 is necessary. But thought 3/8 square drives were rated for 150Ftlbs atleast, tho abusing 3/8 stuff you can definitely do more atleast once.
You ever try doing over 100 lb/ft on a 12" long wrench? I see guys struggle doing 165 lb/ft with a 24" one, and they are standing up and pushing down to get that torque.Mostly just trying to keep as much of my stuff 3/8 as I can, understand at some point moving to 1/2 or 3/4 is necessary. But thought 3/8 square drives were rated for 150Ftlbs atleast, tho abusing 3/8 stuff you can definitely do more atleast once.
It depends on the sockets. Some will, some thin walls will break. When you dealing with torque devices they tend to be very conservative because its not a precision tool.Mostly just trying to keep as much of my stuff 3/8 as I can, understand at some point moving to 1/2 or 3/4 is necessary. But thought 3/8 square drives were rated for 150Ftlbs atleast, tho abusing 3/8 stuff you can definitely do more atleast once.
I’ve found its less strain on the body to pull instead of push, where possible.You ever try doing over 100 lb/ft on a 12" long wrench? I see guys struggle doing 165 lb/ft with a 24" one, and they are standing up and pushing down to get that torque.
In this case, it would require you to sit on the ground and have a large tire turning about a inch from the family tools....plus trying to wrap your leg around the jack. Wheel nut is about 24" off the ground when we change tires, and you are trying to keep a 4 1/2" socket on that nut at the same time.I’ve found its less strain on the body to pull instead of push, where possible.
The point isn't the level of cranking a torque wrench can achieve, it's arriving reliably at the torque required. The longer the handle, the less chance you have at arriving correctly at the lower end of the torque range (too much work being done with a small movement at the handle). The shorter the handle, the lower the top-end of torque can be gracefully/reliably achieved.Mostly just trying to keep as much of my stuff 3/8 as I can, understand at some point moving to 1/2 or 3/4 is necessary. But thought 3/8 square drives were rated for 150Ftlbs atleast, tho abusing 3/8 stuff you can definitely do more atleast once.
I'd get a 1/4" drive for that tiny numbers stuff.The point isn't the level of cranking a torque wrench can achieve, it's arriving reliably at the torque required. The longer the handle, the less chance you have at arriving correctly at the lower end of the torque range (too much work being done with a small movement at the handle). The shorter the handle, the lower the top-end of torque can be gracefully/reliably achieved.
Love my 3/8" Tech Angle! I use it primarily for torquing electrical lugs and bussing, which it is very nice for with the recording feature and the ability to easily and quickly change units of measurement.Snap on techangle goes to 125