R_W_B
Senior Member
Hmmm I dropped back in here tonight. First I want to add in a few things to my previous post. I have never had a T wrench recalibrated, how much does it cost? I can buy them for $30 at Harbor Freight that come with a 4% certificate. I figure the 4% cert is about as trustworthy as my insurance company is (life has variables) so I go with it (and test it to my old needle wrench). If it no longer reads correctly it goes to the scrap metal.
Also just to share, I once tested a bolt on scrap billet just to see when it would fail. It had a spec of 12 to 18 ft lbs. At 30 ft lbs it started to feel weak. At 39 ft lbs the bolt broke. Of course failure would also depend on the material one was working with.
And to Elmosac that wrote
[ I follow what you are saying but don't follow you logic. 100 ft/lbs of torque is just that. It doesn't matter if you use thread tape or pipe dope or nothing. ]
Guy you say that you follow what I am saying but I don't think you do. Let me put it this way. If you run your engine without oil, does the piston still feel the same resistance of the cylinder walls as it does when you add oil ?
The pipe dope is going to lubricate the threads making you (the wrench) feel less resistance (torque) when you turn the bolt to it's internal pressure of thread on thread. But the "internal" pressure of the threads "is" going to be "more" than specs if you keep pulling until you match the physical resistance of if you had not used pipe dope.
Also just to share, I once tested a bolt on scrap billet just to see when it would fail. It had a spec of 12 to 18 ft lbs. At 30 ft lbs it started to feel weak. At 39 ft lbs the bolt broke. Of course failure would also depend on the material one was working with.
And to Elmosac that wrote
[ I follow what you are saying but don't follow you logic. 100 ft/lbs of torque is just that. It doesn't matter if you use thread tape or pipe dope or nothing. ]
Guy you say that you follow what I am saying but I don't think you do. Let me put it this way. If you run your engine without oil, does the piston still feel the same resistance of the cylinder walls as it does when you add oil ?
The pipe dope is going to lubricate the threads making you (the wrench) feel less resistance (torque) when you turn the bolt to it's internal pressure of thread on thread. But the "internal" pressure of the threads "is" going to be "more" than specs if you keep pulling until you match the physical resistance of if you had not used pipe dope.