That would also be good but I was talking about when you are pulling on 
the handle of the wrench to turn it. As it tightens and you have to pull 
harder you must also at the same time apply opposite pressure at the 
head of the wrench to keep the extension and the plug socket straight. 
Otherwise pulling on the handle hard tends to pull the extension out of 
line and when you pull real hard the force is transfered to the 
insulator and snaps it off sideways. Try putting the extension and 
socket on a bolt that is easily accessible and pull on the handle and 
see how the extension gets pulled out of line. You can even pull the 
whole socket off the bolt or nut sideways when pulling real hard.

Manfred



Date: Sun, 8 Jun 2008 13:21:05 -0500
From: Donald Snook <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Manfred wrote: "I don't think it was the torque value. It is due to the
  hard foam piece that holds the top end of the plug in the socket to
  keep it from falling out. If you pull on the wrench handle and don't keep
  the socket or extension straight in relation to the plug, with some
  down force at the wrench head as you pull up on the handle, then the foam
  will transfer the pressure to the insulator and break it."

That is a good point.  When I put the new ones on, I made sure to pull
  the wrench off straight.

Donald H. Snook

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