Robert Bolton
New member
Does anyone have a reasonable source for a torque multiplier with a 750 ft. lb. rating?
Thanks, Robert
Thanks, Robert
I have a 5' length of 1-1/2" pipe that fits comfortably on a 15" crescent wrench and a 50-lb. spring (fish) scale that gets me to 250 #'. 750 #' would be 125# at 6'. Torque value tolerance is + or - 10% so you do not have to be precise at 750 #' (that's tight, 1" grade 8 bolt, 1-1/4" grade 5).Heck I simply use a length of pipe that I slip over my ratchet or on my tire X bar.
...and when the head fails and it becomes a missle and whacks you in the noggin, you'll wish you didn't use a cheater pipe.Heck I simply use a length of pipe that I slip over my ratchet or on my tire X bar.
Twice the tool length= 2x the torque.
LOL, worst wheel had me propping the X bar on a cement block, length of pipe and me jumping on the extended X bar. Loud 'crack' and I landed on my azz.
Heck I simply use a length of pipe that I slip over my ratchet or on my tire X bar.
Twice the tool length= 2x the torque.
LOL, worst wheel had me propping the X bar on a cement block, length of pipe and me jumping on the extended X bar. Loud 'crack' and I landed on my azz.
I don't believe any of them are impact rated. All rated for manual force far as I know. Be too easy to apply too much twist with an impact tool.I have the Neiko larger unit listed in the first link. It's not rated for impact use and the ratio on it is slightly off per one of the reviews and they are correct. I've used a few times to torque/break loose rod caps in cylinder rebuilds on my backhoe.
Ha ha! For a long time I know I've needed one (I've got stuff to un-stick things; I don't have things to tighten to spec anything over about 110 lbs-ft), and then I run across this thread and I feel ashamed... Need to figure out how I can order one of these things off of Amazon without my wife knowing (I use her account)!Darn! Another tool I need.
Interesting experiences for you. I have seen the opposite. I have broken lug bolts off when using a breaker bar. Frustrated, on the same wheel, I took the time to get my impact wrench. Got the rest off without breaking another and didn't grunt or sweat either.Impact is not the solution for all stuck items. Sometimes you need slow steady MASSIVE force to break things loose or move them. I recall one good example where I was using a ball joint press (basically a giant C-clamp) to press out a ball joint on a front suspension arm of my wife's exploder several years back. I used the impact wrench (hi powered IR 1/2" one) and it would not budge. But even an 18" breaker bar with steady but serious force applied would move it. I have run into this multiple times over the years. I always start with impact as it is the Easy Button but there are cases where I know it isn't likely to work and am ready to move to a breaker bar and even possibly a pipe extension on it to get something to move. Just the voice of experience...