Originally Posted by
rydabent
To do the job correctly, you need a torque wrench. As someone pointed out for $10 you can get one at Harbor Freight. This is a case where the type of person that posts here, probably does a lot of his own maintence. It is also a case where a person can and should buy the necessary tools as they are needed.
Never, I say never trust a mechanic that tells you he is totally accurate "by feel".
I read some reviews of it and some people said it would over or undertorque before making a clicking sound. Some even said that they found the inaccuracy to be more than the listed +14% which worries me.