this one I’ve been using for some time now.
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Have you had them checked? Mine have a sticker on them with a date to recalibrate. Not sure if that's a seekonk thing on general rule for torque wrenches.I've collected 6 different Seekonk Pre-Set wrenches over the years. Also have Wheeler and Magna-tip. I prefer the Seekonk Pre-Set wrenches.
It's not a Seekonk thing. It's an every torque wrench used where it matters thing.Have you had them checked? Mine have a sticker on them with a date to recalibrate. Not sure if that's a seekonk thing on general rule for torque wrenches.
I like the concept of the Wheeler digital fat torque driver but have come to dislike it after using it for a year. Its now shoved in the range bag for i.c.e. and have gone back to the non digital fat wrench.I just ordered the wheeler screwdriver type digital bit-driver torque wrench. I hope it works out. Did you like your wheeler?
There are T handles like this one..lots of other options depends what U need.I looked at that link and maybe I missed it but looks like nothing goes above 55 in/lbs.
It's not a Seekonk thing. It's an every torque wrench used where it matters thing.
In manufacturing applications, torque tools are calibrated annually and verified against a NIST traceable standard much more frequently. Sometimes as frequently as every shift depending on what they're being used for.
The fix it sticks looked handy but didn't go high enough to barrel an MRAD. They also have like a 10%+ error.
All-in-one has an error rate of +/- 10% while the limiters have a +/- error rate of 6%
according to their posted info
Fix it sticks do not have a 10% error. Where did you see that? Are you talking about the limiters or the all in one?
A test from a few years ago testing some torque wrenches.
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Torque Wrenches for Precision Shooting
Thanks for the write up. I too don't really care for the borka kits. We stock the fix-it-sticks deluxe kits now. The torque limiters are quite good, in operation at least. I'll send you out a kit and you can check it out.forums.gunhive.com
I have that 1/4" tekton clicker. It blows compared to a CDI or Precision Instruments. It hardly clicks and IMO is very easy to go over your target torque spec. YMMV.I just got done shopping for one to do it all. It's too expensive to get t-handles for every job and most of the high end torque wrenches that are adjustable don't come in the appropriate range I need --not low enough or not high enough, always something. And I couldn't find a good t-handle that's adjustable.
There are lots of good ones, the Seekonk I have for the DTA is great, others like CDI. But those are expensive. A lot of what you're paying for is the certification.
The fix it sticks looked handy but didn't go high enough to barrel an MRAD. They also have like a 10%+ error.
I ended up getting a "Tekton" on Amazon for less than $50 --it has a 3-4% error (same or better than most of the ones recommended on here, it's actually a good number) and it's range is 10-150 IIRC. It's small enough to fit in field kit and it works for all optics and barrels I deal with.
Why pay more for higher error? Even if wear and tear makes this one less accurate it'll still be better than many out there and cheap enough to replace.