Would you trust this torque wrench?

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r_chez_08

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I need to take my clone crankshaft out at some stage to weld and machine because I broke a piece of the keyway off.
I guess I need to get the rod bolts and the flywheel correctly torqued.
I found this on ebay. Would it do the job?
Thanks
 

r_chez_08

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ok I think I will buy it at some stage, or is there another better one in that sort of price range?
 

fowler

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ok
\
iv never seen just lbs

why wouldnt they just go with the rest of the world and be foot pound or newton metres

infact they are metric machines the secs should be newton metre
 

machinist@large

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It should be able to let you get the job done; at the very least it'll help keep you from over torquing things. Just don't use it to replace a ratchet in your socket set; the ratchet on this thing is only for aligning with the bolt in question easier.:thumbsup:
 

r_chez_08

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Ok, i will get one at some stage, but I need to buy a new jackshaft now so not no1 on my priority list.
Russ, I think its a typo, because it says ft/lb's before it.
 

Russ2251

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No where does it indicate inch pounds.
Other than flywheel, inch pounds is what you need for the small engines we work on.
Says 1 click equals 1 pound or 12 inch pounds per click...or am I missing something.
Specs
 

sexyvicta

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you know you can convert ft pounds to inch pounds or nm or whatever you want.

i use a ft pound/NM torque wrench.

my tecumseh manual lists inch pounds and ft pound specs. Ie cylinder head bolts = 160-200 inch pounds or 13-16 ft pounds.

-all of the important stuff in your engine will be over 5ft pounds so you can use that wrench.
 

r_chez_08

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Russ- I am confused- are you saying the scale devision is too big or the wrong scale?
If too big, I see what you mean because many of the gx200 torque values are in the decimal places.
However in a years time I plan to get a car, and would like this tool to be usable for that purpous also. Would it be suitable?
 

devino246

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Russ- I am confused- are you saying the scale devision is too big or the wrong scale?
If too big, I see what you mean because many of the gx200 torque values are in the decimal places.
However in a years time I plan to get a car, and would like this tool to be usable for that purpous also. Would it be suitable?

That'll work for engines and such, but most car lugs call for 80-110 ft/lbs. Plus, its only like 12 inches long; have fun putting 80 lbs of pressure on that handle. There is no one tool that does it all. In/lb wrench for small engine and some car work, and a ft/lb wrench for larger bolts.
 

r_chez_08

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Ok thanks. How does the dial turn? It looks really wierd! And is it better or worse than the other type I posted?
Thx
 

Doc Sprocket

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No "dial". Very simple. The handle connects to the head with a long bar, as you can see. What you maybe can't see, is a thinner bar that also goes from the handle, but is NOT connected to the head- it's a pointer. So as you torque the fastener down, the main bar flexes under the strain. Since the pointer bar is not connetced, it remains straight and points to the calibrated scale- literally measuring the deflection of the main bar.
 

devino246

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Im not a fan of those beam wrenches. It can be pretty frustrating if your torquing something like lugs. It's accuracy also varies.
 
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