bc1080
Mechanical
- Sep 11, 2015
- 20
We have a through-bolt joint where there is very limited access to one side of the interface. We are planning to torque from the open side using either a torque multiplier or a calibrated electronic impact driver. The other side (restricted area) is a 12-pt nut with 1.5" flat-to-flat, and the only thing we have found that will fit over/around the nut is a box end wrench. They will probably have to brace the wrench against the side of the structure or index it against something to keep it from rotating during tightening. However, I am concerned about the ability of the wrench to withstand the 1000 ft-lbs we are applying with 1-inch drive tooling on the torquing side. I have not seen any limitations or documentation on torque after researching several wrenches. Most people seem to have a "use it till it breaks" approach. A common sense basis tells me the wrench is probably strong enough for what you would expect a human operator to be able to apply to said wrench, plus some safety factor to account for abuse such as a cheater bar. So if the wrench is 22" long, and if we can assume a human can apply 200lbs of force we only get 367 ft-lbs (times said safety factor, so maybe ~800 ft-lbs?), which is still a bit under 1000. Wasn't sure if there is more to go on or if there were any experiences with using a hand wrench for high torques.
The only crow's foot type wrenches I can find are flare nut type (due to the 12pt nut), and they are 1/2" drive which I do not believe would withstand anywhere near that much torque. I can't recall seeing much else tooling that might help here.
The only crow's foot type wrenches I can find are flare nut type (due to the 12pt nut), and they are 1/2" drive which I do not believe would withstand anywhere near that much torque. I can't recall seeing much else tooling that might help here.