There's a big difference between using a standard socket on a torque wrench with a cheater on the handle and having an extension where the socket goes on. I wouldn't call the latter a cheater. You're multiplying the force of the gauge by extending the socket center. I would call a cheater something to make it easier to pull to get the proper torque, whether it's a piece of pipe or a guy who works out and has strong arms. The torque wrench would have no way to know what was pulling it. Most torque wrenches are sufficient length to reach their capacity without the need for a cheater though.
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Today's Featured Article - Fire in the Field A hay fire is no laughing matter-well, maybe one was! And a good life-lesson, too. Following World War II many farm boys returned home both older and wiser. One such man was my employer the summer I was sixteen. He was a farmer by birth and a farmer by choice, and like many returning soldiers, he was our silent hero: without medals or decorations, but with a certain ability to survive. It was on his farm that I learned to use the combination hand clutch and brake on a John D
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