Recommend a torque wrench

Snap-On QJ117C. Conversion scales on the body for Nm~LbIn. You could go mad with a more expensive digital one.
Wrenches of a lesser quality are available... :cool:

A just a tad over £205 it's a bit cheapskate for me! And it's only accurate to 4-6% - the Halfords Pro item tested better than that - shame they don't do a ¼" model.

:rolleyes:

Greg
 
Facom 208-25 :thumb

1053909551_nqBaQ-O.jpg


Browse their excellent online catalogue - unless you know a local Facom dealer, have a look at Prime Tools - I've bought from them before with great service :clap
 
Jeremy Burgess once told me that if you cant judge the correct torque of a thread up to 14m then its best to leave it to someone who can.:augie
 
Teng. :thumb2

I have two of the suckers, a small one for really light loads and a bigger one for the heavy stuff. In my experiance, just as good as the kit the tool snobs use, but much more affordable.
 
Jeremy Burgess once told me that if you cant judge the correct torque of a thread up to 14m then its best to leave it to someone who can.:augie

+1 - we have a local Honda parts specialist run by a proper 'back in the day' old boy racer - his opinion is that torque wrenches are for those that don't know their own strength - he still races, and to this day has never employed a torque wrench.

I don't think any of his bikes have fallen apart :augie
 
+1 - we have a local Honda parts specialist run by a proper 'back in the day' old boy racer - his opinion is that torque wrenches are for those that don't know their own strength - he still races, and to this day has never employed a torque wrench.

I don't think any of his bikes have fallen apart :augie

I've never broken my head either, but that doesn't stop me wearing a crash hat!

I rather disagree with that philosophy (even though lack of a small torque wrench has thus far forced me to adopt it). Back in the good old days when we were generally screwing AF and UNC threads into steel housings, you couldn't do much wrong. But these days you now find fine threads being screwed into alloy housings. Overtighten and you strip the thread; undertighten and it falls apart. In particular I am thinking of the triple clamp yokes on my Husaberg - not an area you'd want to get wrong.

It actually isn't very macho to say you never use a torque wrench when you can buy a suitable tool for a few quid.

Greg
 
I've never broken my head either, but that doesn't stop me wearing a crash hat!

I rather disagree with that philosophy (even though lack of a small torque wrench has thus far forced me to adopt it). Back in the good old days when we were generally screwing AF and UNC threads into steel housings, you couldn't do much wrong. But these days you now find fine threads being screwed into alloy housings. Overtighten and you strip the thread; undertighten and it falls apart. In particular I am thinking of the triple clamp yokes on my Husaberg - not an area you'd want to get wrong.

It actually isn't very macho to say you never use a torque wrench when you can buy a suitable tool for a few quid.

Greg
+1 :thumb Why have a torque figure if your just going to guess it, over-tighten and it can snap, under-tighten and it'll drop off :blast

Anyway I have two, both from Halfords and for what I need them for they do me fine :thumb
 
There's something deeply satisfying about having the right toools for a job. :hammer

Got a Teng one for little torques and a Halfords one for big torques.

:beerjug:
 
I've never broken my head either, but that doesn't stop me wearing a crash hat!

I rather disagree with that philosophy (even though lack of a small torque wrench has thus far forced me to adopt it). Back in the good old days when we were generally screwing AF and UNC threads into steel housings, you couldn't do much wrong. But these days you now find fine threads being screwed into alloy housings. Overtighten and you strip the thread; undertighten and it falls apart. In particular I am thinking of the triple clamp yokes on my Husaberg - not an area you'd want to get wrong.

It actually isn't very macho to say you never use a torque wrench when you can buy a suitable tool for a few quid.

Greg

+1 :thumb Why have a torque figure if your just going to guess it, over-tighten and it can snap, under-tighten and it'll drop off :blast

Anyway I have two, both from Halfords and for what I need them for they do me fine :thumb

Quite agree - personally I use torque wrenches where applicable - but he's an old boy who sets his valve clearances by sight and inflates his tyres by feel - just passing on his views for the your general amusement.......:D
 
funny but true, as a lad I used to do everything by the book.

I remember carefully measuring torque on missle pods in south America (even though the ex Vietnam Hueys were hour expired and full of bullet holes)

but now, yes I do sometimes put my heel on the rim to see if the tyre squashes.

and

Valve clerances need to be half way between sloppy and tight

plug gap - as long as its parallel its ok

Black oil needs changing

worn carb - drop needle a notch

mix meths with petrol to clean out water in tank

Chain - should not bang against swinging arm

try 'seal swell' before stripping an engine to stop a leak

have been soldering up radiators recently

glued a hole in a tyre

and even swap bits over for our safety/ emission tests:augie

(dont worry - I never sell one of my old vehicles !)
 


Back
Top Bottom