For beginners, a torque wrench might seem like overkill to have in your home mechanic's arsenal. But in reality, using one could save you a lot of money at the workshop. Getting the bolts on your bike as tight as they need to be and no tighter is important for safety as well as efficiency.
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Best overall torque wrench set: Pro Bike Tool 2-20Nm Torque Wrench set
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Best budget torque wrench: Merida Adjustable Torque Wrench
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Best portable torque tool: Silca T-Ratchet Kit + Ti-Torque Kit
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Best compact torque wrench: Park Tool ATD-1 Adjustable Torque Driver
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Best torx bit torque wrench set: Park Tool THT-1 - Sliding T-Handle Torx Wrench Set
Why? If you don't tighten them enough, then you run the risk of the bolt coming undone. If they're too tight, then there’s the danger of causing serious damage to your bike and, as a result, to yourself. Over-tighten a seat clamp, for example, and you could ruin a carbon-fibre frame.
Bike-specific torque wrenches provide just the range of tightness most commonly found on easily-damaged parts like seat post and handlebar clamps.
Click-type torque wrenches are the most common kind, alerting you with a click when you've reached the set tightness. And the best torque wrenches come with factory certification and can be returned or recalibration so you know they're doing the job perfectly.
Here's our pick of the best torque wrenches for the cycling home mechanic. If you want to know more about how we select products to appear in our buyer's guides, head to this article on how road.cc reviews products.
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5 comments
The Silca is not that great, if you go online to Silca and look at the scale they use it is very poorly designed with the readings far to close together for any degree of accuracy. I noticed this at my LBS where I could see it better in live in person, even the store rep didn't like the way it was designed, and that thing cost $125?
I had the store order a Lezyne Torque Drive Bike Multi-Tool with 11 bits because that's the one that the rep uses at home, but you can add bits as you need them since any hardware/home improvement store sells those bits. The scale reading on the Lezyne is a lot better spaced, much easier to apply torque and get it correct. The Lezyne cost around $50, a full $75 cheaper than the Silca, and the Lezyne is better.
I don't think the Park Tool THT-1 Torx wrench set is a torque wrench set.
Yeah - but torx is obviously the plural of torque, so you're getting more for your money.
For the home mechanic, how often does the torque wrench need to be reclibrated?
The usual heuristic cited is once every 12 months or every 5000 uses, whichever comes first. Personally I can't really see what the passage of time is going to do to a well-stored tool and so I work more on the basis of a number of uses; I probably only use my torque wrench 50-100 times a year so basically don't really bother having it recalibrated apart from when I know the bolt has been tightened accurately, e.g. by a bike shop or by someone with a new/re-calibrated wrench I might test the wrench against it if it's handy. Is this heretical?