Sorry, I gotta disagree. When you are working out of the garage at home, a
$20-$50 torque wrench will suite you just fine for the total number of times
that you will use it. When you do it for a living, that $225 wrench can make
the difference doing a job and doing it again and eating any damage that the
failed repair may cause. You wouldn't reassemble a Northstar or a sohc Ford
with a $20 wrench. Snap-on warrants the wrench for a year because they need
to be recalibrated after repeated use. I've had a 20-250 swivel headed
"click" type since 85' and have failed to break it yet.
Just my dollar 2 ninety 8's worth,
Jaybird
-----Original Message-----
From owner-spridgets at autox.team.net
[mailto:owner-spridgets@autox.team.net]On Behalf Of Charley & Peggy
Robinson
Sent: Sunday, October 15, 2000 10:25 AM
To: Brad Fornal
Cc: Daniel1312@aol.com; bmantz@infi.net; spridgets@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Torque wrench recommendations
Hay Guys,
I just visited the Sna-On Store. A 20 - 200 ft lb "click-type" torque
wrench is listed at $225 and the case is extra. I read the warranty: 1
year. They can shove it. I thing Snap-On tools are overpriced but
someone has to pay for the fancy truck and front door service.
Harbor freight shows one with a lifetime warranty for $26.99. Made by
Pittsburgh. Sears or this?
Cheers,
CR
Brad Fornal wrote:
>
> For the price of Snap On and the "now" lack of any warranty on most stress
> related tools, they refused to warranty my strap wrench, what are you
paying for
> now that the warranty is gone?!?
>
> Daniel1312@aol.com wrote:
>
> > To begin with probably not, but a year later, 2 years????
> >
> > You get with you pay for with Hand tools which I why I use Snap-On
wherever
> > possible (my Torque Wrench is a good British brand). Over the years it
hasn't
> > seen much use but when I have the calibration checked it has been ok.
> >
> > 1312
> >
> > In a message dated 15/10/00 02:20:15 GMT Daylight Time, bmantz@infi.net
> > writes:
> >
> > << Is there that much differance in accuracy among them? >>
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