I need a good torque wrench

Good to know, thanks Jared. They have a torque wrench- no price- I guess if ya gotta ask.........ya can't afford it. :mrgreen:
 
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So. My buddy had a Husky 50/250 click wrench at the shop. The reason he did not want it was because the adjustment collar was jammed. It is supposed to be pressed down, the torque adjustment made, the collar released, snaps into place locking the value, carry on. Well it was busted in the adjust position, would not release, and handle would not turn. I took it anyway. Husky is the Home Depot store brand. It had a lifetime warranty, 'no questions asked, no receipt required'. I took it to HD, and swapped it for a brand new one. I would not say it was 'no questions asked' without a receipt, but I downloaded and printed the HD/Husky warranty and brought it with me. After they read that, EZPZ. I got a brand new $100 Husky 50/250 torque wrench for free. I guess I can't beat that deal no matter how hard I try. :mrgreen:
 
If you own or work at a repair shop where your tools are used on a constant basis, things are bound to break sooner than later, for the individual... tools will tend to last a greater amount of time.
 
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You boys complaining about the Harbor Freight wrenches not clicking just aren't making the extra effort they demand.

I have their 3-foot monster that I got for the Buick V6 balancer bolt (which wanted 215 lb-ft). Took a mighty yank leaning against the fender, but it worked. I also used it on the pitman arm, lying on my back. Not sure if it took more effort to click or hold up.

Their little 1/4" drive model has a weird click, like the audible equivalent of a slow-motion video. And it can take just as much effort to achieve that click as higher torque on a bigger wrench.
 
You boys complaining about the Harbor Freight wrenches not clicking just aren't making the extra effort they demand.

I have their 3-foot monster that I got for the Buick V6 balancer bolt (which wanted 215 lb-ft). Took a mighty yank leaning against the fender, but it worked. I also used it on the pitman arm, lying on my back. Not sure if it took more effort to click or hold up.

Their little 1/4" drive model has a weird click, like the audible equivalent of a slow-motion video. And it can take just as much effort to achieve that click as higher torque on a bigger wrench.
I'll agree to disagree.after over torquing my rear sway bar u-bolts to the point it distorted the saddles that clamp it to the housing,i cranked a 7/16" bolt in the vise and was able to break it attempting to achieve a tone of some kind outta my Pittsburgh unit.
 
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If you own or work at a repair shop where your tools are used on a constant basis, things are bound to break sooner than later, for the individual... tools will tend to last a greater amount of time.
Then you also have to admit that occasionally a wrench gets used as a hammer. It is also a reason why Snap-On is most often used in a real shop. When said wrench is used as a hammer, then when the Snap-On truck comes around, you just turn it in for another. Also a good reason why you are required to buy your own tools at a shop. Otherwise they would treat the tools like your good-for-nothing brother-in-law that 'borrows' your tools and then looses/breaks them.
 
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