ryan roopnarine
05-04-2008, 05:57 PM
calibrated, and avoid tragedy.
friday morning/saturday evening, i was reassembling my gm 4l30e transmission. i didn't scrutinize my rebuild manual heavily, and figured that some bolts that i would be putting in would be under ~18lb-ft, and that i would be using the inch-lb wrench. i take pretty good care of the inch-lb wrench, because in my mind it is more delicate than the ft-lb unit. anyways, the inch-lb unit is broken, and i read that the bolt in question is really 18-19lb-ft, and would need to be dealt with the 1/2 inch drive wrench. i will fess up, and say that since the larger wrench is used mostly for lugnuts, it is occasionally left and stored at 100ft-lb. i never have a problem with it clicking off where it is supposed to at that setting. the part in question is about the size and height of a stack of 15-18 dinner plates. the first bolt took a lot of pressure, but eventually clicked off. my friend and I wrote our difficulty off to the fact that a stack of dinnerplates is kind of hard to hold perfectly stationary. perplexed, i tried backing the wrench down to 10ft-lb and putting in the next one.........
grrrr.....the wrench began to move more easily....
expletive
i back the bolt out, and see what appears to be a helicoil come out wrapped around the bolt that goes into the oil slinger of the transmission. i pull it off to see that most of the thread has come out, wholesale, out of the part. the location doesn't lend well to inserts, and this transmission has taken >>>>>4x the time that it should have, so we go down to the autozone and rent one of their torque wrench. a rudimentary test against the new inch-lb unit shows reasonable compliance. installing the rest of the bolts goes with reasonable wrench turning effort, so the gasket should be held in ok. the bolt that pulled the threads out has a little bit of thread to grab on, so we just leave it as tight as we can.
moral...some of you know this already, some of us don't. if youever feel the need to use a torque wrench, you must get it calibrated, or its utility is questionable or non-existent. i won't screw that up again.
friday morning/saturday evening, i was reassembling my gm 4l30e transmission. i didn't scrutinize my rebuild manual heavily, and figured that some bolts that i would be putting in would be under ~18lb-ft, and that i would be using the inch-lb wrench. i take pretty good care of the inch-lb wrench, because in my mind it is more delicate than the ft-lb unit. anyways, the inch-lb unit is broken, and i read that the bolt in question is really 18-19lb-ft, and would need to be dealt with the 1/2 inch drive wrench. i will fess up, and say that since the larger wrench is used mostly for lugnuts, it is occasionally left and stored at 100ft-lb. i never have a problem with it clicking off where it is supposed to at that setting. the part in question is about the size and height of a stack of 15-18 dinner plates. the first bolt took a lot of pressure, but eventually clicked off. my friend and I wrote our difficulty off to the fact that a stack of dinnerplates is kind of hard to hold perfectly stationary. perplexed, i tried backing the wrench down to 10ft-lb and putting in the next one.........
grrrr.....the wrench began to move more easily....
expletive
i back the bolt out, and see what appears to be a helicoil come out wrapped around the bolt that goes into the oil slinger of the transmission. i pull it off to see that most of the thread has come out, wholesale, out of the part. the location doesn't lend well to inserts, and this transmission has taken >>>>>4x the time that it should have, so we go down to the autozone and rent one of their torque wrench. a rudimentary test against the new inch-lb unit shows reasonable compliance. installing the rest of the bolts goes with reasonable wrench turning effort, so the gasket should be held in ok. the bolt that pulled the threads out has a little bit of thread to grab on, so we just leave it as tight as we can.
moral...some of you know this already, some of us don't. if youever feel the need to use a torque wrench, you must get it calibrated, or its utility is questionable or non-existent. i won't screw that up again.