OP here.  To answer some questions.  Why do I want to move to a click style 
torque wrench?  For most of the 35+ years as an adult riding and working on 
bikes I felt very comfortable with my internal sense of whether a bolt was 
tight or not.  I don't ride carbon and it never occurred to me to use a 
torque wrench.  Time marches on; the hands, arms, and back loose strength 
slowly and our judgment gets compromised.  In the last five years I have 
overtightened and broken the clamp on a very good Chorus FD;  I have also 
undertightened and eventually damaged a very good Record FD.  I have 
undertigtened the left side of a crank arm, at which point I started using 
my ratchet instead of allen keys and bought a beam style torque wrench to 
double check crank bolts.  I found I couldn't hold the tool in tension and 
bend over far enough to read it accurately.  (I have to admit that at that 
point I had never seen nor heard of click style torque wrenches.)  This 
summer, while up in Ontario for the Canadian Tandem Rally I heard the 
 irritating clicking of  not tight enough chain ring bolts (tandems have 15 
of em and how tight are they supposed to be anyway).  That's when I began 
to think it would be wise to check my  judgement with a tool. 

I found this AC Delco on the Sears web 
site. 
http://www.sears.com/durofix-ac-delco-power-tools-durofix-ac-delco-power/p-SPM7423422303?prdNo=28&blockNo=28&blockType=G28
 
 It's 2 -37 ft/lbs seems perfect for bike work.

Bill, thanks for your feedback about subject lines.  What was I thinking?

Michael


On Thursday, July 21, 2016 at 5:14:33 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> Me, I use mine only for crank bolts; this after cracking a very expensive 
> Topline Superlight crank, some 18 years ago, by torquing down the mounting 
> bolts too enthusiastically. 
>
> OTOH, if you adjust your bike with vise grips and pipe wrench, you really 
> don't need to worry.
>
> On Thu, Jul 21, 2016 at 2:07 PM, Scott McLain <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> Okay, I am relatively new here and don't want to sound like a heretic, 
>> but I personally don't use a torque wrench.  Certain torque wrenches need 
>> to be re-calibrated periodically.  I would be curious to know what bolt 
>> connection the riv folks use a torque wrench for versus just putting things 
>> on using common sense.  
>>
>> I bought a new bike many years back from a new shop and the owner built 
>> it up, all using a torque wrench.  I was there as he was finishing up.  I 
>> was impressed.  I thought, wow he's using a torque wrench.  Well on my 
>> first ride, my handle bars and my crank was loose... very loose.  
>> Obviously, he needed a new torque wrench or to have his calibrated.
>>
>> I love the appeal that come with using a torque wrench, but I think you 
>> still want to use common sense.
>>
>>

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