Actually, I'd buy an Icon 3/4" drive clicker wrench. They are around 300 bucks every day and come with an accuracy certification I should probably buy one as I have 10 hole Bud style wheels (pilot mount) that I could use it on.
I know nothing good or bad about HF's Icon torque wrenches. Maybe they're as good as any other of similar price, I really don't know.
But I can tell you from personal experience, that I have bought
more than one torque wrench from China, pulled the thing brand-new out of the box and tested it... and they've been a mile off. So then I pull the cal cert out of the box, stamped, dated, and supposedly "confirmed" to be within xx.xxx% accuracy. But they're not.
Every certificate of conformity, cal cert, and other such document is only as good as the tools used to confirm the spec, and the training or knowledge of the person doing the confirmation. And it seems many of these Asian manufacturers do either a terrible job of maintaining their tools, or in training their people on how to properly use them. They certainly don't show their full NIST traceability on most. They may be confirming the accuracy of that tool using a gauge that's 20% off its mark, or the operator may have rigged the equipment up in a way that defeats its intended accuracy.
That said, I'm not sure how much any of that matters to a home-shop mechanic. I personally wouldn't sweat over it for lug nuts, or really anything other than engine rebuilds.
For anyone who really cares about this stuff, you can buy most torque wrenches from most reputable suppliers with a proper NIST calibration cerfication. It used to add about $100 to the price 20 years ago, so I'm guessing's it's probably $200 adder today, but not a huge deal if it's going into a critical application.
Also, most pro garages pay third-party companies to come around and re-calibrate their torque wrenches every few months. If you know a mechanic, especially a dealership mechanic or engine rebuild guy, you can probably just hand them your torque wrench the week of their next scheduled visit. My BIL's shop does this, they have a service that comes thru a few times per year and re-calibrates any equipment and wrenches that require it. I think the mechanics pay for service on their own tools but are required to show that their tools are always have updated (yearly?) cal certs.