Those are the clamps I bought...guess I didn't dig far enough through the links, as I just found that they have a max torque of 90 in. lbs which is about 7.5 ft. lbs.
Over the past few years I've had a few places that dripped in the winter. They had regular hose clamps on them, and I was able to stop the drips with by tightening slightly. This year, it seems that I have more than a few. The worst were on the two rubber couplings along the 1" line which feeds the heater core.
I did finally get them all tight enough to stop the leaks, but it certainly took more turns on the clamps than I expected. In the past it only took 1/4 turn or so, this time it was over a complete turn.
My concern is that there are only so many times this can be done before the rubber is fully compressed and loses the ability to absorb any further expansion/contraction from temperature variations. I've got replacement couplings on hand, and I'm thinking that in spring I'll replace them so I can have more rubber between the pipe and the clamp once again. I guess that these are OEM rubber, so they've given more than anyone can expect from them.