Secure nuts and bolts without over-tightening using this simple tool Are you worried about damaging nuts and bolts when you're tightening them? Rather than guessing when to stop tightening, a torque wrench is the perfect tool for the job....
www.wikihow.com
I think these instructions generally work with most of the click-type torque wrenches with the twist handle and the locking knob on the end, but seeing as how the internet is less accurate than 10 years prior I couldn't find anything definitive about storing the wrench and zeroing it out.
The WikiHow articles states:
Dial the wrench back to 0 before you put it away. After you finish tightening the nuts or bolts, turn both dial settings on the handle back to 0 (or the lowest marking on your wrench). Leaving the dial turned to a torque setting higher than 0 can throw off the wrench’s calibration over time and cause it to be inaccurate
Most of the instructions I found, including the printed leaflet included in mine, say, "
when wrench is not in use, adjust to lowest torque setting. Do not turn handle below lowest torque setting"
Are they saying to leave the lock knob loose on the lowest torque setting or tighten it down? I thought you were just relaxing it sort of like untyting your shoelaces or like a belt is loose when you're not wearing it. What do you all do?