Been waiting for this Tim. Only two words are needed to sum up the description of this MONSTER……. BAD ASS!!!! I bet this thing would set you back about the going rate of a decent truck nowadays 🤣. Awesome review buddy👊
That's really funny. TTC would laugh at that too. The equipment that We use and that TTC uses is nowhere near the precision and accuracy of what HYTORC uses in house. Their machines are certified for Nuclear, Food Distribution, NASA, Wind Turbine, and many other very critical processes. We and TTC use very simplistic equipment to test tools and provide relevant data to the consumer. Thanks for watching.
Looks like an extremely useful tool for those whose work can justify the cost. Precision, power, and self-documenting for quality assurance. I do wonder, though how you'd tighten lug nuts on a wheel with recessed lugs. I don't see what the reaction arm would work against. Perhaps another socket placed on an adjacent lug?
id see this used more as in the oil field where i torque up frac spreads and be easy to get most of ground work done its easy and it keeps hands away from the danger zone
Hi.. Does this tool come with an extension that can be attached the 1 inch drive of the tool? Also, the socket sizes used in this video are not so big. Are larger socket sizes, let’s say, 3 or 4 inches (across flats) available for this tool?
If this is precision bolting system, it means regular calibration is needed to keep it to be accurate all the time. So you have to send it back to Hytorc for calibration from time to time?
That’s not a physics theory my man that is one of the three LAWS of momentum not trying to be a troll or anything but sir Isaac newton deserves his due credit for what he got right hundreds of years ago
Joe, this is the exact reason why we need viewers, like yourself, which are smarter than us. You are correct, Sir Newton is probably rolling in his grave now. Thanks for the input and thanks for watching.
@@Shoptoolreviews thanks for great content my man , I love your channel , and I also love physics , here I get to watch three of my favorite things in the world come together , great people , awesome power tools , and applied physics in one awesome format !
Hydraulic, pneumatic, and battery wrenches that use reaction arms are super common in the industrial world. General practice is to use the adjacent nut as your reaction point.
Been waiting for this Tim. Only two words are needed to sum up the description of this MONSTER……. BAD ASS!!!! I bet this thing would set you back about the going rate of a decent truck nowadays 🤣. Awesome review buddy👊
It's definitely going to set you back a few $K that's for sure. Thanks for watching and for the kind words.
@@Shoptoolreviews absolutely brother. Take care man
can you guys lend this to the torque test channel so they can test how accurate it is?
That's really funny. TTC would laugh at that too. The equipment that We use and that TTC uses is nowhere near the precision and accuracy of what HYTORC uses in house. Their machines are certified for Nuclear, Food Distribution, NASA, Wind Turbine, and many other very critical processes. We and TTC use very simplistic equipment to test tools and provide relevant data to the consumer. Thanks for watching.
Great for bridge work, metal industrial carports, cell phone towers, large windmills, large ships, ect.
Looks like an extremely useful tool for those whose work can justify the cost. Precision, power, and self-documenting for quality assurance. I do wonder, though how you'd tighten lug nuts on a wheel with recessed lugs. I don't see what the reaction arm would work against. Perhaps another socket placed on an adjacent lug?
It only does 500 ft lbs & up. Not really used for lug nuts. Even tractor trailer lug nuts are only around 450-500 ft lbs
id see this used more as in the oil field where i torque up frac spreads and be easy to get most of ground work done its easy and it keeps hands away from the danger zone
Extremely dangerous second strat button , you can easily crush your fingers .
Basically a drill with an arm to help apply more torque
Arm is just support, what makes thr torque is the planetary gears
@@BenJamin-ou7kd 👍
Hi.. Does this tool come with an extension that can be attached the 1 inch drive of the tool? Also, the socket sizes used in this video are not so big. Are larger socket sizes, let’s say, 3 or 4 inches (across flats) available for this tool?
Is this the best 1/2” impact torque gun on the market?
If this is precision bolting system, it means regular calibration is needed to keep it to be accurate all the time. So you have to send it back to Hytorc for calibration from time to time?
sick bro!
could it be used on head bolts on engines especially the ones that you go 45 degrees after certain torque
Yes, lots of engine manufactures use these for that very reason.
That’s not a physics theory my man that is one of the three LAWS of momentum not trying to be a troll or anything but sir Isaac newton deserves his due credit for what he got right hundreds of years ago
Joe, this is the exact reason why we need viewers, like yourself, which are smarter than us. You are correct, Sir Newton is probably rolling in his grave now. Thanks for the input and thanks for watching.
@@Shoptoolreviews thanks for great content my man , I love your channel , and I also love physics , here I get to watch three of my favorite things in the world come together , great people , awesome power tools , and applied physics in one awesome format !
Hi !If we are not getting exact values how to adjust it's torque.
What does that cost?
A lot!! Lol. They run several thousand $$ each. Thanks for watching
Wow 🤩
Its a drill with a torque multiplier on the front and a computer in it.
with that much price tag they should make a better plastic design and the app also look oudated
I believe it’s aluminum
That reaction arm is actually extremely dangerous. I wouldn't brace it off an adjacent nut. If something pops, your wrist is gone.
No your wrist is not gone. It’s going to move a couple degrees and then just spin extremely slowly but with a ton of torque
Hydraulic, pneumatic, and battery wrenches that use reaction arms are super common in the industrial world. General practice is to use the adjacent nut as your reaction point.
Same reaction arm used all thru industry