Does it Damage Click Stop Torque Wrenches to Loosen Nuts

I lent my 3/8 Snap On torque wrench to my neighbor one time. He needed to torque some fasteners. He returned it to me afterwards and mentioned breaking fasteners loose. I was horrified. Years later I had it calibrated. They told me it was damaged for counterclockwise.
This was 40 years ago.
I had the exact same scenario but with the 1/2" version. Team Torque tried to fix it and failed miserably. Years later I sent it to Snap-On under the flat-rate repair service; the wrench came back with a note saying everything inside (except ratchet head) was pretty much destroyed.
 
I will say I'd try to avoid using a torque wrench to loosen, but some manufacturers claim some can handle being used for that. In a worst case scenario and it's the only tool I had to use in a pinch without being able to just visit a store for something more applicable I'd use to loosen. At the end of the day the best tool to have is the one in front of you when needed.
 
I agree with not using it to loosen fasteners, but I’m curious as to what gets damaged and why. For example, torque is set for 100 lb-ft and the breaking torque on a fastener is 75 lb-ft. What exactly is causing the damage?
 
Tightening or loosening, don't push it past its torque setting and you should be fine. They are probably bi-directional to allow for the occasional left-hand fasteners.
 
Tightening or loosening, don't push it past its torque setting and you should be fine. They are probably bi-directional to allow for the occasional left-hand fasteners.
When the wrench manufacturer specifically states not to do that - don’t do that.

If you can’t afford a breaker bar for that task, you sure can’t afford a new torque wrench.
 
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