Lowe's has
Craftsman 3/8" SAE Torque Wrench (20-100 ft. lb. Capacity, CMMT99433) for
$49.98.
Shipping is free, otherwise select free store pickup where stock permits.
Note, availability for store pickup may vary by location.
Amazon has
Craftsman 3/8" SAE Torque Wrench (20-100 ft. lb. Capacity, CMMT99433) for
$49.98.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
TheWallaby for finding this deal.
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https://www.lowes.com/pd/CRAFTSMA...1000
As far as anvil size, once again, the SAE system is the standard. If you order a German-made Stahlwille wrench from Germany, it might say 6,3 mm on the packaging instead of 1/4 in --- or it may show 12,6 mm instead of 1/2 in, but clearly the Germans are using the standard American anvil sizes of 1/4, 3/8, and 1/2... it may just be labeled in a mm conversion, but English anvil sizes are the international norm.
Finally, to reiterate... when SAE is mentioned in relation to a torque wrench it is usually a reference to the torque wrench reading in SAE foot pounds and the torque range being rated in foot lbs as well (eg, 20 - 150 ft lbs).
Hope that helps.
I bought the Craftsman 1/2" wrench this morning, then saw the Husky one posted just recently. I was about to cancel the Craftsman one to get the Husky, but after reading some of the comments, I found the Husky to be made in China, whereas the Craftsman to be made in Taiwan (better quality).
The Husky has a limited lifetime warranty, but if you are getting junk, it's just wasting trips to the store to replace for another sketchy item. Personally, I'm keeping the Craftsman and will pick it up on the way home from work today.
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https://www.lowes.com/pd/CRAFTSMA...1000
Repped
Btw what sizes do square anvils and come to think of it hex impact driver slots come in abroad, where it's all metric?
And, while we're at it, what's a good 1/2" torque wrench that goes up to 250 ft-lb, under $60?
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I bought the Craftsman 1/2" wrench this morning, then saw the Husky one posted just recently. I was about to cancel the Craftsman one to get the Husky, but after reading some of the comments, I found the Husky to be made in China, whereas the Craftsman to be made in Taiwan (better quality).
The Husky has a limited lifetime warranty, but if you are getting junk, it's just wasting trips to the store to replace for another sketchy item. Personally, I'm keeping the Craftsman and will pick it up on the way home from work today.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I bought the Craftsman 1/2" wrench this morning, then saw the Husky one posted just recently. I was about to cancel the Craftsman one to get the Husky, but after reading some of the comments, I found the Husky to be made in China, whereas the Craftsman to be made in Taiwan (better quality).
The Husky has a limited lifetime warranty, but if you are getting junk, it's just wasting trips to the store to replace for another sketchy item. Personally, I'm keeping the Craftsman and will pick it up on the way home from work today.
The Tekton torque wrench (3/8") is $42 on Amazon right now and the 1/2" drive is $39. I would take a Tekton any day over Craftsmen, and that doesn't even take into account the lifetime warranty that Tekton offers.
https://www.lowes.com/pd/CRAFTSMA...1000
bought this earlier this year even posted a deal on it but didn't get much traction. it's a really good wrench and very solid made. I've used it to torque 220lbs and it was good
Btw what sizes do square anvils and come to think of it hex impact driver slots come in abroad, where it's all metric?
And, while we're at it, what's a good 1/2" torque wrench that goes up to 250 ft-lb, under $60?
literally posted 2 comments above yours
I bought the Craftsman 1/2" wrench this morning, then saw the Husky one posted just recently. I was about to cancel the Craftsman one to get the Husky, but after reading some of the comments, I found the Husky to be made in China, whereas the Craftsman to be made in Taiwan (better quality).
The Husky has a limited lifetime warranty, but if you are getting junk, it's just wasting trips to the store to replace for another sketchy item. Personally, I'm keeping the Craftsman and will pick it up on the way home from work today.
Are you really judging quality on country of origin alone? I'm not questioning your conclusion, just how you got there. I'm also not saying anything about buying preferences based on country, nor am I judging anything about preference based on politics or economics, but you seem to be drawing your conclusion based on country of origin, and I'm curious how you get there.