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vossman
10-10-2014, 20:50
I have a good quality Craftsman ft lb torque wrench that's barely used but at least 15 yrs old. Any easy way to verify its accuracy? It was stored in a case and under zero spring tension. It seems to be working ok. I can torque a nut and then increase torque amount on the wrench and it will move the nut a bit then pop. Did this three or four times.

USMC88-93
10-10-2014, 20:55
Easy, maybe not but you can google "craftsman torque wrench calibration" and pick your poison. If you really want to verify it needs calibrated.

sniper7
10-10-2014, 21:06
Just get a new harbor freight one for $10!

DenverGP
10-10-2014, 21:11
i have a lot of hf cheap tools, but i'd be more confident in an old craftsman torque wrench than a brand new HF one.

To Bear Arms
10-10-2014, 21:19
If you can find a Snap-On dealer most of them have a torque indicator on their truck.

Great-Kazoo
10-10-2014, 21:37
locate someone in your area with a click type torque. Compare them.

Graves
10-11-2014, 02:32
If you can find a Snap-On dealer most of them have a torque indicator on their truck.

Of the 8 I've dealt with over the years, none of them had one on the truck. They usually have somebody they'd send it to. Same goes for the Matco/Mac/Cornwell dealers I've had.

Graves
10-11-2014, 02:34
If you can find a Snap-On dealer most of them have a torque indicator on their truck.

Of the 8 dealers I've dealt with over the years, none of them had one on the truck. They usually have somebody they'd send it to. Same goes for the Matco/Mac/Cornwell dealers I've had.

Colorado Osprey
10-11-2014, 06:53
Calibration and Verification- since you are in Colorado Springs- Local Company

http://pptli.com/calibration.php
Pikes Peak Test Labs- off Platte and Wooten across from the flea market.

ray1970
10-11-2014, 07:03
I have access to a thing that verifies torque. My company spends a lot of money every year having our torque wrenches calibrated. My boss bought this thing so we could do them ourselves but then decided he would rather have the professionals do it and get the paperwork that comes with the official certification.

If you want, I could probably take it and verify it for you. Might not be able to do it for several weeks though.

To Bear Arms
10-11-2014, 07:50
Of the 8 dealers I've dealt with over the years, none of them had one on the truck. They usually have somebody they'd send it to. Same goes for the Matco/Mac/Cornwell dealers I've had.

For a calibration it's is sent off. All the dealers I have worked with have a unit that just verifys torque.

soldier-of-the-apocalypse
10-12-2014, 01:31
"I have a good quality Craftsman ft lb torque wrench" is this a joke, I'm done with crapsman now that its all Chinese junk if you break your good quality USA made tool and take it in the just give you harbor freight junk that's branded as craftsman. They were always pretty crappy but it was decent and USA made, now I just stick with snap on and mac and they calibrate torque wrenches on the truck

vossman
10-12-2014, 10:26
No joke here, the high end Craftsman products used to be good quality IMO. Haven't bought anything in a while from them so quality is probably gone to shit but I'm not looking for a $1000 torque wrench either.

To the member that recommended youtube, thanks. Easy little formula to get an accurate measurement.

hobowh
10-12-2014, 11:55
Since Sears started to slide downhill so has craftsmens quality at least fro what I have noticed. Since yours is an older unit it was prob a quality one that was actually made by one of the big 3. To get a true idea if it's true you need to get it to someone with a torque meter, and can calibrate it if needed.

ben4372
10-13-2014, 01:03
Harbor Freight has a digital torque extension for something like 40 bucks. Hotrod magazine did a comparison. They checked accuracy against better brands and it was super accurate. Like less than 1 percent off. Was even better than a couple big brands. Likely less than the cost of calibration.

james_bond_007
10-14-2014, 16:12
This is actually not a bad article http://www.wikihow.com/Calibrate-a-Torque-Wrench (even though it is Wiki How) to help calibrate a torque wrench for non-government use (aka the home mechanic) vs $25 for calibration (See http://www.anglerepair.com/charges/ )

SUMMARY:


Place the wrench drive fitting in a vise, so the handle can move when loaded, and is parallel to the floor.
Get a weight (load) of known value (could be a water jug you fill up with sand or lead shot and weigh yourself to a known weight).
Place it at a known distance on the handle, from the drive fitting center. (I'd use a piece of wire fashioned into a hook to hook the jug on the handle)
Move the weight closer/farther from the head, and see where the wrench "slips".
Check the reading against the calculation (see below)
Adjust the wrench and repeat, using different loads, until you are comfortable with the "calibration".


CALCULATION
Torque (ft-lbs) = Weight (pounds) * distance (in feet)

EX:
Jug = 10 lbs
Distance = 10 " = 10in * (1 ft /12in) = 0.8333 ft

Torque = 10 lbs * 0.8333ft = 8.333 ft-lbs


NOTE: This is not a substitute for a professional calibration or a 'perfect' way to measure torque.
NOTE: I'd NOT expect a Craftsman (non-precision) wrench to be linear across the full specified range.
NOTE: I'd expect the wrench to be more linear in the middle of the range, than at the extremes
NOTE: You could also take the weight of the hanging wrench handle into account, but unlike the article (it says to weigh the wrench), I don't think you can get away with just weighing it.
Weighing the wrench assumes a lumped model at some distance. The weight of the wrench is actually follows more of a distributed model along the length of the handle.
It will have a lumped equivalent model, but it is likely not equal to the weight of the handle when weighed separately.

Again, this is NOT a precision calibration method, but should
a) tell you if you are in the ballpark (if you have no calibration adjustment)
or
b) allow you to GET in the ballpark (if you have a calibration adjustment).