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Torque Wrench Questions

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MarkJ
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PostPosted: 13:04 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Torque Wrench Questions Reply with quote

Hi guys, I need your advice on torque wrenches.

Basically I need one for day-to-day mainenance tasks on my Hornet 600 (rear axel bolt, spark plugs etc.), the lowest ratings in my haynes manual is 9Nm for the drive chain slider bolts and 5Nm for the carburettor stud nuts.

I've seen a lot of torque wrenches that start at 10Nm, will these be OK? Or should I get one that starts at 0Nm? All the wrenches seem to be around 20-30 quid. They'd work with a normal socket-set wouldn't they (ones with square ends)? Or should I get two: one for 10Nm+ and one from 0Nm?


Nm stands for Newton-meters, doesn't it? Very Happy

Cheers guys Thumbs Up (Sorry, there's a lot of questions Embarassed)
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fuzz
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PostPosted: 13:09 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Mine goes from 28Nm to 200Nm, and it's fine for everything I do. 5Nm isn't that tight really. Anything under the scale on my wrench I do up as tight as I can with a normal wrench. The only time you need to be torquing to the right value is when there are bearings behind the nut/bolt, and on things like brake mount bolts. These are usually above 30Nm anyway. My torque wrench cost about £16. Spark plugs are best done by feeling when they are tight. You might be worried at first that it's not tight enough/too tight, I was, but believe me, you know when it's right.
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Cillit-BANG
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PostPosted: 13:17 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

A torque wrench for £30 won't be accurate enough down to 5nm anyway so your far better 'feeling' those bolts home.

Mine was a Draper for £30 which does 20-80nm which does most jobs on a bike that require the proper torque.

They work with a normal socket set up, but check it's either 3/8" or 1/2" drive to make sure it's compatible with your sockets. I'd imagine you'd want a 3/8".

If your looking for a cheap one, I'd avoid one that does a massive range of settings, as it's likely to be far less accurate.
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BorderHooner
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PostPosted: 13:19 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

torquers from halfords (in glass display cabinet) are excellent value and rate highly in surveys and reviews.
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John C
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PostPosted: 14:56 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've got 2 Norbar torque wrenches:

1 for 8-54Nm
1 for 40-250Nm.

You're looking at £40+ for a decent one as they're the torque wrench world equivilent of snap-on sockets.


Last edited by John C on 10:27 - 19 May 2006; edited 1 time in total
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syl
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PostPosted: 15:01 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Another vote for Halfords (professional range). £50-60 each but worth it. I have 2, one is 8 - 60 Nm and the other is 60-300 Nm. They also make a 40 - 200 Nm but i didn't see the point in getting that. Standard sockets work with them - but check which size they are (1/4, 3/8 or 1/2 " drive) and which size sockets you already have.
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0ddball
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PostPosted: 15:38 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Avoid the Clarke ones, i've gone though literaly about a dozen of them. Poor quality, poorly calibrated and if it isn't already broken when you buy it as many are, it soon will be.

Yet another vote for the Hafords pro one. My current one is serving me well.
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Finglonga
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PostPosted: 20:25 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

dmahon wrote:
Another vote for Halfords (professional range). £50-60 each but worth it. I have 2, one is 8 - 60 Nm and the other is 60-300 Nm. They also make a 40 - 200 Nm but i didn't see the point in getting that.


Reason the halfrauds ones are so good is that they are made by Sykes Pickavant, Quality peice of kit. Thumbs Up
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MarkJ
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PostPosted: 21:42 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Cheers guys Thumbs Up
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divuk83
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PostPosted: 21:54 - 18 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Got a large Teng one and a smaller Norbar one. Teng one is huge and does 40-210nm upwards, other smaller one does 8-54nm. Better to get two than to try and get one that covers the whole range of torque settings. Make sure to get one thats the same size as all your existing sockets etc!

Dave
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Radnor
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PostPosted: 13:20 - 19 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Another vote for avoiding cheap torque wrenches

When it does turn out to be miles out of calibration you'll have done more damage than the extra £20-£30 for a decent one would have cost you

From my own experience
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jay12329
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Joined: 02 May 2003
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PostPosted: 13:53 - 19 May 2006    Post subject: Reply with quote

Most of the bolts on may hornet arnt torqued with a special rench. I have a halfords one which is good. But doesnt cover the whole range.
Rear axel nut is done up "tight" and the wheel adjuster nuts are just done so they wont move.
HTH
J
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