Stanley Theta Controller User Manual page 63

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Theta Controller
maximum capacity of the tool). When any individual torque reading from the tool's controller is
compared to a torque reading from the external torque monitor, there can easily be a several
percent difference higher or lower. This means that the tool's controller starts counting angle at a
different point than the external torque/angle monitor starts counting. This could be five to 10
degrees different depending of the hardness of the joint.
The only way to get consistent results when validating an angle reading against an external
monitor is to pretorque the joint slightly higher than the snug torque. Run the tool on this
already-tightened joint, with the snug torque set to the same value in both the controller and the
monitor. Even if the tool's transducer and the external transducer do not exactly agree near the
snug torque, they will both start counting angle just before the fastener starts to rotate, so their
zero angle will be synchronized exactly.
For example, if a brake line fitting requires 6 NM plus 40 degrees, pre-torque the joint to 7 NM
first. Then change to an Angle Control strategy, with 6 NM snug torque, plus 40 degrees angle
target, and reset the external torque/angle monitor. Then as the tool is run in this angle control
mode, the tool starts counting angle as soon as it has 6 NM (which might have been 5 or 7 NM
according to the external transducer), which is before the joint actually starts to rotate. And the
external monitor starts counting angle as soon as it has 6 NM (which is also before the joint starts
to rotate). This way, both meters are reading angle from the same point, even though the torque
readings may differ slightly because of the allowable tolerances in the torque calibration.
Appendix B – Torsion Compensation
59

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