(This post was last modified: 04-15-2020, 02:26 AM by eeyore.)
Marko Wrote:Whats wrong with the click type torque wrench and how do you check it for accuracy? I have a fairly decent quality one that I've had for years and no wheel has unexpectedly departed any vehicle. So far.
Hi:
When the kids left the house I gave up trying to convince folks to do things my way. And a whole lot longer before that I stopped listening to those that did. Frank Zappa, one of our nations best and most intelligent poets had this to say, "I resent it when other people try to inflict their ideas of betterness on me. I don’t think they know."
So having problems over thinking and over designing just about everything I do, thought I'd share with tool folk an utterly simple, effective solution to torque. I wouldn't waste a single letter telling you there is anything wrong with your micrometer/clicker. How the heck would I know? Ford or Chevy or Mopar, pick one...
I know I used a simple Craftsman beam for decades of DIY use and had confidence it was good. I never got that warm and fuzzy from the plastic handle Craftsman clickers that replaced it. And I ain't buying Snap-On, partly because I don't want to and partly because everyone says so and mostly becaue I don't want a micrometer spring clicker. That's on me.
Regarding testing: Saw on youtube a method if you have a torque wrench you trust. So yeah, this fella is using a beam to test his clicker.
youtube
Rebus Knebus and
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'The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog.' - Mark Twain