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Author: Subject: Re calibrating a torque wrench
steve m

posted on 10/5/11 at 11:23 PM Reply With Quote
Re calibrating a torque wrench

I picked up my torque wrench earlier that has been sitting on its own in my garage,for years, and somehow the lock screw has undone itself rending the whole unit as scrap

Is there any where i can get it recalibrated ??
Im not sure of the make, but it was not cheap!!

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Ninehigh

posted on 11/5/11 at 12:20 AM Reply With Quote
Didn't know they could be recalibrated, but if you can borrow one why not try putting it back together and see if it's still good?






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HowardB

posted on 11/5/11 at 06:18 AM Reply With Quote
Cromwell tools in Leicester offer a re-calibrating service,..... but that is "not cheap",..


what range is it,... perhaps you can make a balance to calibrate it,... not a practical solution for anything over about 100Nm,..





Howard

Fisher Fury was 2000 Zetec - now a 1600 (it Lives again and goes zoom)

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cliftyhanger

posted on 11/5/11 at 06:36 AM Reply With Quote
I checked one by clamping the square drive "peg" in a vice, and then used bathroom scales as I turned it to measure the force. Remember 1kg=9.8N (usually rounded to 10). then go the calculation.
Should get it pretty close

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rgrs

posted on 11/5/11 at 06:37 AM Reply With Quote
have a look at :
SANDVIC - Calibration Analyzer Torque tester - V G Con | eBay UK

There are digital calibration units that come up time to time, but they are normally a lot more money.

Roger

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02GF74

posted on 11/5/11 at 09:45 AM Reply With Quote
put bolt in steel plate with a nut on. tighten using a long bar of known length with weight (e.g. 2.0 l bottle of water) hanging off the bar to get the lb/ft.

reassemble the torque wrench, set to scale to the above and tighten nut - then you will see if the troque wrench is under or over reading.


probably done best for low, mid and top ranges of the wrench.






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designer

posted on 11/5/11 at 09:48 AM Reply With Quote
Just bin it and get a new one, they are so cheap now, it's cheaper than re-calibrating.
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