โFeb-11-2015 10:20 AM
โMar-28-2015 04:33 PM
DaHose wrote:
I have the same experience as BurbMan. The HF Pittsburgh line of tools look/feel just as good as the Craftsman sold today. I have worked my HF wrenches HARD on my RV and they have been fantastic with no damage even to the finish. HF even honors a true lifetime, no hassle tool replacement on the pro-line of tools. Craftsman stopped honoring that policy years ago.
Jose
โMar-17-2015 07:17 AM
โMar-17-2015 07:06 AM
DaHose wrote:
Billy79 - I mentioned earlier that I have the Ryobi kit and bought the impact, but it was unable to remove lug nuts put on at 80 ft/lb. It just doesn't have the torque to do really heavy work.
The HF banged them off my RV with a few whacks and they were on at 160 ft/lb. If you want something that works for low dollars, the HF version is great. If you have money to spend, buy the Ingersoll Rand, Snap-On or Bosch.
Jose
โMar-17-2015 05:23 AM
โMar-15-2015 12:57 PM
โMar-15-2015 10:43 AM
โMar-14-2015 07:01 AM
โMar-14-2015 06:38 AM
โMar-13-2015 07:30 PM
โMar-08-2015 04:21 AM
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โMar-05-2015 08:58 PM
โMar-05-2015 01:32 PM
Lynnmor wrote:cdevidal wrote:
Thanks. I see you have a click wrench. Is a bending beam wrench to be avoided when tightening lugnuts?
I currently have a beam style wrench but I've never seemed to understand how it works. Seems like nuts jerk when being tightened, not a smooth turn, thus I can't seem to get a good reading as the needle is bouncing all over the place while the nut jerks. On my TODO list is to read more and watch videos, or buy a click style wrench.
A bending beam works just fine. The clicker is for convenience. The best way to torque a fastener is to take the reading while the wrench is still in motion. Once stopped, stiction needs to be overcome causing the jerks you mentioned.