Originally Posted by: KBM I've always gone on the three main tension settings. tight, f'n tight and mother f'n tight.
it's done me well for many years but I suppose you've got to do up a lot of bolts first.
any bolt that needs to be done in sequence as in heads is different
please tell ,gm5735, how to check with the pipe and water 'cause I've got 5 plus torque wrench's
and i'd be curious to test them against each other as I've blamed a couple for broken bolts.
One theory I've heard is to tighten the bolt until you hear a crack, then back it off a quarter of a turn.
To test our tesnion wrench, what we need to do is apply a known force over a known distance to the tension wrench and compare it to the scale reading. Like this:
1/ Find a length of pipe, usually around 2 feet long, that's a slip fit over the handle of your tension wrench. The lighter the tube, the better.
2/ Clamp the socket adaptor in the vice with the torque wrench horizontal, and on the left hand side of the vice.
(Pushing down on the handle should click it off - sorry to all those mollydukers who want to check left hand thread tension wrenches, you get to use the right hand side of the vice)
3/ Slip the pipe over the tension wrench handle and measure from the centre of the socket adaptor along the pipe to a point 3 feet from the socket adapter centre, and mark it. Make sure the pipe is only over the section where your hand would normally rest on the tension wrench.
4/ Set the tension wrench to the value you want to check. This setup allows you to check up to about 60 ftlbs, so let's say set it to 60 ftlbs.
5/ Hang your bucket (plastic 9 litre is about the right size for up to 60ftlb) with the handle on the mark at 3 feet.
6/ Fill the bucket slowly until your tension wrench clicks/beeps/indicates or does its thing at 60ftlb.
7/ Measure how much water is in the bucket, by volume. Bale it out with a measuring cup. You could just weigh the water, but I don't trust your bathroom scales, so volume is a better way. Lets say 8.5 litres is how much you used for this example.
8/ Multiply the number of litres by 2.2046, and then by 3. In this example, 8.5 x 2.2046 x 3 = 56.2ftlb. This means that when your tension wrench indicates 60 ftlbs, you are actually applying 56.2 ftlbs.(see the note below)
It would be good practice to check the tension wrench at a few points in the scale, say 30 and 60ftlbs for the places we usually play. If you need more than this, a bigger bucket or a longer piece of pipe are needed.
Note This method doesn't take into account the weight of the pipe, the empty bucket, or the tension wrench itself. This means the result will read slightly lower than the tension wrench setting, which is why the tube and the bucket should be as light as possible. You could correct for these slight errors in the calculation, but the maths and measurements are tedious and this was supposed to be a quick check.
You could also use an accurate spring scale in place of the bucket, should you happen to have one.
For those purists who just have to use metric, instead of 3 feet for the distance from the socket adaptor to the bucket handle, use 1 metre (and the socket adaptor will still be 1/2", so you aren't that pure after all...)
Using 1 metre the maths for the above example becomes 8.5 x 9.81 x 1 = 83.4 Nm.
Enjoy.