Although I'm not certain that a torque wrench would measure accurately that far outside its range, I can suggest an alternative to measuring an angle. Instead, measure the distance between the marks on the gauge for 150 ft-lbs and 108 (a difference of 42) then make your own mark that extends beyond 150 by that amount.
After torqueing I would use a regular ratchet with the angle gauge so you don't damage or through off the torque wrench calibration.
Yes a torque wrench should be used to final torqued the bolts after initial bolt installation is done. A click type torque wrench would be the fastest and most repeatable of the type of torque wrench to use for that application.
M1 = M2 x L1 / L2M1 is the torque setting of the wrench.M2 is the actual torque applied to the nutL1 is the normal length of the wrenchL2 is the extended length of the wrench (Length of wrench + length of adapter)Remember... Torque = Force x Radius
There are a couple of different tools that are good for tightening lug nuts. A torque wrench and a lug wrench are good for tightening lug nuts. Typically lug nuts would be tightened with a torque wrench, but a lug wrench is much cheaper.
Hydraulic torque refers to a tool that is designed to exert torque on a fastener to achieve the desired tightening or loosening of connection by using a hydraulic.
In a counter-clock-wise motion us a 19mm socket wrench to loosen. For more leverage use a Torque wrench. The torque wrench would be used to install the lugs nuts to a specified torque setting. For more leverage use a 1/2" drive breaker bar.
torque wrench
torque wrench
torque wrench
To tighten a bolt to 30nm you would need to use a metric torque wrench. There are digital torque wrenches that can switch from standard (in-lbs, ft-lbs to newton meters).
Its a torx head T55 not an Allen wrench
Not bad. Some specialty tools needed like a foot lb torque wrench, an inch lb torque wrench and a dial indicator. A shop manual for that vehicle would also be helpful.