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Dirt Bike Brands - Other
Torque Wrench Calibration
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[QUOTE="SFO, post: 864716, member: 21864"] Beam types I consider to be less fallible than their clicker equivalent. Clicker torque wrenches rely on the operator to dial them up and then back down after every use. If not the spring that is the core of their accuracy can take a set and yield less than desirable readings. One of my first mentors in the motor building field would consider it a sacrilege to let the torque wrench leave your hands without dialing it down. Having the wrench calibrated will also show you what you are really getting at each increment of torque in relationship to its settings. Thats what will allow you to compensate for that 2~3% variation. My last torque wrench I bought was an electronic snap on tech wrench that had a1% accuracy throughout its range and no springs, instead it used a load cell. [url]http://buy1.snapon.com/catalog/item.asp?P65=&tool=all&item_ID=68406&group_ID=17510&store=snapon-store&dir=catalog[/url] [/QUOTE]
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Dirt Bike Discussions By Brand
Dirt Bike Brands - Other
Torque Wrench Calibration
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