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#15 |
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ProCrastinationConsultant
Join Date: Sep 2013
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Yea, I always figured a breaker bar would put too much side load on the lugs, so avoided it...
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#16 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
The cross is also always going to have side load since it is completely impossible to exert the exact same pressure with both hands. One side or the other is always going to be either pushing up and toward you or down and away. The only plus to the cross is that you can spin the nuts once loose.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Tcoat For This Useful Post: | soundman98 (06-04-2022) |
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#17 |
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ProCrastinationConsultant
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i'll give it a shot next time.
i will say i've never lost a lug spinning them on, it's always taking them off. so the side load from the 4-cross is the only thing that sorta makes sense.
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#18 |
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ProCrastinationConsultant
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i'll give it a shot next time.
i will say i've never lost a lug spinning them on, it's always taking them off. so the side load from the 4-cross is the only thing that sorta makes sense.
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"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time"
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#19 |
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the wheel studs on the car are fairly temperamental. When my car was still under warranty they would rotate my tires for free and they either cross threaded or over torqued the lugs and i broke 1 stud and when trying to take another lug off it was clear i was going to need to break that one too. I took it back to toyota to complain and the service manager was a **** about it. i had them fix those studs, went to check none of the other lugs/studs were a problem, and then never took my car there again.
It's uncommon for places like America's Tire to hand start the threads and to use the air gun to start the threads and over torque using the same tool. I have since rotated my tires on my own constantly without ANY issues, the one time 3 weeks ago i took it to Americas Tire to have a small hole patched and they completely destroyed my locking lug even though i told them the key was in the center console area. its hard to find good help these days. who would have thought lug nut install would be a bridge too far for a tire place and also dealership techs? |
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#20 | |
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my process removing lugs: 1/2 drive impact (battery). My process installing lugs: anti-seize, hand thread until its clear they have been started, 3/8 drive impact (battery) mid speed just until it bottoms and start clicking and then quickly stop, Torque wrench. This is the process we used for changing tires on the Formula Drift cars I worked on (minus adding anti-seize every time) and never had issues in all those tire changes over the course of 5 years. Thousands of tire changes and no issues so thats what i stayed doing. |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to e_lunatic For This Useful Post: | soundman98 (06-04-2022), Tcoat (06-04-2022) |
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#21 | |
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The tire shop I use specializes in raised trucks and the crew there are all “enthusiasts” so they take the extra few minutes to treat each vehicle like it is their own.
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#22 |
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Professional Mechanic
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I taught a lesson to the tire guy last week. He was doing the tires on his A5 and he was reaching for the Astro 1894 THOR gun to put them back on (SMA's Big Nasty(TM)).
I went "nah dude, just snug 'em up with my tiny 3/8ths and finish it up with my digital torque wrench" He found out there and then that yes, you can rocket past 89 lb/ft even with a 3/8ths gun without even being nasty on it, because he was past 89 on every bolt. Moral of the story is, 89 lb/ft is "one handed snug" with a breaker bar, so even if you don't think you're overtorquing them, you probably are. If you do your tires, no sense in buying an expensive digital wrench with a calibration certificate, this is enough https://www.harborfreight.com/12-in-...nch-63882.html |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to RZNT4R For This Useful Post: | soundman98 (06-05-2022) |
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#23 | |
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I have one tire shop that I trust in my area. Otherwise I just drop off my wheels most of the time for my vehicles. I probably had over 100 tire changes on stock rear studs with no failure. They lasted longer then the hubs did.
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#24 | |
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very true. im guessing that the speed either makes up for cost of replacing broken parts or maybe some of these places just haven't done the numbers to figure out what the cost benefit might be to doing things the "right way". The Discount Tire that ruined my locking lug did say they would replace it but I ended up getting an entirely new set of lugs since i needed closed ended ones anyway and i never went back to have them pay so i guess they skated there. was my fault for trusting them with the car anyway haha |
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#25 | |
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Senior Member
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The car guys that know the difference and would actually fight it are such a tiny speck in the overall scheme of things that the time saved will always mean profit for the shady places.
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Racecar spelled backwards is Racecar, because Racecar.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Tcoat For This Useful Post: | e_lunatic (06-09-2022) |
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#26 |
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I've never had so many problems with wheel studs and nuts before i got this car. Ended up getting them all changed to ARP and *knock on wood* have not had problems since.
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#27 |
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So I had to replace 3 studs, $400 later
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#28 |
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oof. thats about twice what i'd expect it to cost.
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2013 FR-S 10 Series ~75k (SOLD)
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