Hunter79764
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2021
- Posts
- 529
- Reaction score
- 930
- Location
- Grand Prairie, TX
- First Name
- Shawn
- Truck Year
- 1987
- Truck Model
- Suburban V20
- Engine Size
- 350
Note that while the battery size on any particular system is generally about how long the battery will last, you will not get the maximum power out of a tool with a smaller battery. i.e., make sure you have a larger (5AH+) battery to go with your big impact if you plan to stretch it's legs fully. It may work on the 1.5AH that came with your drill kit, but that doesn't mean you get all the advertised ft-lbs out of it.
I've got Dewalt, the 1/4" hex does a pretty good job, the 1/2" was my next addition a while back, and I got the 3/8" this year from Santa. For a long time, that 1/4" did quite a bit. I'd get the lugnuts broken loose with a bar, then do the rest with the impact. Then snug them with the impact and use my bar to get the final torque by hand. It pulled a crank bolt on my wife's 6.2 yukon with some heat (which may or may not have been previously tightened to factory specs, admittedly), and generally got everything I needed with some heat applied first. But yeah, I think any of them will be enough for what you need, pick a battery system and go with it.
I've got Dewalt, the 1/4" hex does a pretty good job, the 1/2" was my next addition a while back, and I got the 3/8" this year from Santa. For a long time, that 1/4" did quite a bit. I'd get the lugnuts broken loose with a bar, then do the rest with the impact. Then snug them with the impact and use my bar to get the final torque by hand. It pulled a crank bolt on my wife's 6.2 yukon with some heat (which may or may not have been previously tightened to factory specs, admittedly), and generally got everything I needed with some heat applied first. But yeah, I think any of them will be enough for what you need, pick a battery system and go with it.