Q: do you use a torque wrench for wheel lugs?
#1
Racer
Thread Starter
Q: do you use a torque wrench for wheel lugs?
i'm just curious how many people use torque wrenches for precise tightening of wheel lugs -vs- people who just tighten by feel.
I know there are always manufacturer recommended wheel lug torque specifications, including Corvette.
(ie: should i go out and buy a torque wrench?)
I know there are always manufacturer recommended wheel lug torque specifications, including Corvette.
(ie: should i go out and buy a torque wrench?)
#2
Yes, I use one and yes you should buy one. (or two - One large and one small) They come in handy not only for wheel lugs, but just about any DIY project. I have a nasty tendancy to overtorque everything, so having a torque wrenches has saved me untold nightmares.
#3
Le Mans Master
it depends on the wheel. but generally i don't because I've tightened enough wheels with one to know about how much to tighten them. i would always use one on rod bolts etc.
#4
Drifting
Always. I carry a spare cheapie Harbor Freight in my truck. At home I have a Snap-On 3/8 in. flex head (most used), 1/2 Snap-On, a Bonney 600# 1/2 inch, 2 cheapie Harbor Freights, and a very old Craftsman beam type. Every spark plug, wheel lug, etc gets torqued. Maybe not quite correctly, but torqued.
#5
Drifting
#6
Race Director
#10
american racing 200s wheels, always torque them
#13
I saw a car loose a wheel because of over torqued lug nuts. Over the years the streching weakened them and finally they gave way. Fortunately the damage was not serious, but it could have been. It made me into a believer.
#15
Race Director
I've never bothered with my street cars.
With the vintage racer I crew on, we torque them every time we go out on the track, even if we haven't pulled a wheel. We torque them to 80 lb, but I will say that the battery impact gun I use, seems to torque them right at 80 lb too.
With the vintage racer I crew on, we torque them every time we go out on the track, even if we haven't pulled a wheel. We torque them to 80 lb, but I will say that the battery impact gun I use, seems to torque them right at 80 lb too.
#17
Racer
Member Since: Feb 2008
Location: Streator Illinois
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Of course, use one all the time on engine assembly.
Terry
#18
I always do so that I can remove the lugs if I have a flat. Impact wrenches can put them on so tight that the small lug wrench in the car can't remove them. 80ft.lbs. also. mike...
#19
Melting Slicks
I frequently do brake jobs, etc. for friends, I'm always pulling wheels off. As a habit I always torque them. I don't want one of my friend's wheels falling off because I got in too much of a hurry.
Some thirty years ago I was out ripping around a back road in a sports car when the overloaded right front wheel (whose screw-in studs had been stripped by an ignorant mechanic) parted company, rolling under the car and launching it into the air where it did a half-spin and came down backwards against a rock face, nearly totaling the car.
After that I became a little more careful how I install lug nuts...
Some thirty years ago I was out ripping around a back road in a sports car when the overloaded right front wheel (whose screw-in studs had been stripped by an ignorant mechanic) parted company, rolling under the car and launching it into the air where it did a half-spin and came down backwards against a rock face, nearly totaling the car.
After that I became a little more careful how I install lug nuts...
#20
Team Owner
Yes, 80 is what I use, cross-ways of course. I understand those who say they "know" the proper torque by hand. And in fact I come very close by "feel" after many years of doing the job. I just like to take the one step further and verify. Doesn't hurt.