Livebai8
Full Access Member
The one i have is from Harbor Freight. I just used it incorrectly...lesson learned!
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Buy a 1/4” drive that reads in inch lbs, don’t use a 3/8” drive that reads ft lbs. for this kind of application.The one i have is from Harbor Freight. I just used it incorrectly...lesson learned!
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There’s no way you should be stripping threads or breaking bolts with ANY torque wrench no matter how cheap because torque values are so far lower than a bolt’s breaking point that it’s nearly impossible with the exception of tty bolts and those are in the very high torque ranges. Cross- threaded bolts maybe but that’s not the torque wrench’s fault. Either you didn’t set it right or you didn’t use it right IMO.I don't trust any cheap torque wrench anymore, after using a cheap brand new one I snapped the oil pump's threads.
I don't trust any cheap torque wrench anymore, after using a cheap brand new one I snapped the oil pump's threads.
I’m actually surprised the HF one beat the Snap-On in the accuracy and repeatability tests. Shame on you, Snap-On lol.Oil Pump bolts are only 18 lb-ft I believe, must have been WAY off to snap one of those bolts...been using Harbor Freight torque wrench for years and never had an issue (not even the ICON mentioned below, but the cheapest one they had)....multiple independent tests have shown the Harbor Freight torque wrenches to perform on par with the $$$ name brands....would I rather have a SNAP-ON? Sure, but im not gonna spend 10X the $$$ of the Harbor Freight tool when they do the same thing.
I didn't use it right...i didnt.know there was a difference between inches and pounds when it came to torque settings...now I know!
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well if you would have used metric nm this would not happen (Newton-meters)thats 44 INCH-pounds...which would be 3.67 FOOT-pounds...
1 FOOT-pound = 12 INCH-pounds
0.4nm = 0.00000057 inwell if you would have used metric nm this would not happen (Newton-meters)
0.4 nm= 3.540298442733 inch lb