rags
Senior Member
just can't use an acorn nut to pull the stud in. use a plain nut upside down, flat side vs. tapered against the washer.
This guy's working on a different year, but should be pretty much the same thing. Expect to tear up the nut you use to draw the stud in with.I would need to get a whole new hub/bearing assembly in order to replace the studs - correct?
Yes Sir! It's listed in Snapon's Supplemental catalog. I have both the small one for cars and the big one for heavy trucks on my truck this very moment.Lisle?!?!?
Please don't... a proven way to loose a wheel.I bought a parts car 48 Dodge years ago and the rear axle looked like it had sat in a river for a few years but I wanted to tear it down and salvage a few parts but the rims were still in place and figured I was going to have to battle 10 rusted lug nuts. Got my 6 pt socket and 1`/2 breaker bar and muscled up for the intial pull and the darn lug nut came off with almost no effort! Some saint had put never seize on the firggin lug nuts and studs at some point in the distant past....ever since then I put never seize on all my stuff!
So when you finally get everything back in shape don't forget to add a healthy dose of never seize to the studs before spinning on the lug nuts. ;)
You should never put anti seize, oil or other lubricant on wheel studs. This will result in an over torque of the nut and could stretch the stud and or damage the rim.I bought a parts car 48 Dodge years ago and the rear axle looked like it had sat in a river for a few years but I wanted to tear it down and salvage a few parts but the rims were still in place and figured I was going to have to battle 10 rusted lug nuts. Got my 6 pt socket and 1`/2 breaker bar and muscled up for the intial pull and the darn lug nut came off with almost no effort! Some saint had put never seize on the firggin lug nuts and studs at some point in the distant past....ever since then I put never seize on all my stuff!
So when you finally get everything back in shape don't forget to add a healthy dose of never seize to the studs before spinning on the lug nuts. ;)
Really? I've been doing that since I was a teenager... I've only ever had one wheel loosen, and that was one I had never touched. Blame the local tire shop for that one.Please don't... a proven way to loose a wheel.
Really? I've been doing that since I was a teenager... I've only ever had one wheel loosen, and that was one I had never touched. Blame the local tire shop for that one.
Having gone through the OP's problem on a few cars that my kids dragged home over the years, I continue to put just a little dab of anti-seize on the lug nut. I also re-tighten the lug nuts after driving it the first couple of days and I tighten by hand, only depending on my impact to spin the nut on. Keep in mind that my daily drivers are immersed in a salt bath that I like to call "nature's lock-tite".
That is just nasty not to mention plain stupid. It must have taken quite the effort to get them off red picture usually needs to be heated to release. I can only imagine some of the words that were expressed during this struggle.A few year ago, I was following a friend down I-95 on the way to Daytona. He was trailering his bike using a borrowed trailer; I was trailering mine behind him. He blew a tire on the borrowed trailer, and once we got to the shoulder, he found he could not get the lug nuts loose. Since he had a severe lung condition, I jumped in to help and with enormous effort, I very slowly got the nuts to turn. They would hardly turn at all, even after a few turns. Turned out, some dickweed had coated the threads with red Locktite. . .
Check this video out it explains why you shouldn’t put anti seize on the lug nuts.
Proper torque is usually stated as wet or dry. In automotive wheel applications it is always discussed as dry by put anti seize in it is now a wet torque. This is extremely important and rather than try to explain it please listen to the video as he does a pretty good job.
Nothing surprises me anymore... A little heat will defeat red loctite.A few years ago, I was following a friend down I-95 on the way to Daytona. He was trailering his bike using a borrowed trailer; I was trailering mine behind him. He blew a tire on the borrowed trailer, and once we got to the shoulder, he found he could not get the lug nuts loose. Since he had a severe lung condition, I jumped in to help and with enormous effort, I very slowly got the nuts to turn. They would hardly turn at all, even after a few turns. Turned out, some dickweed had coated the threads with red Locktite. . .
Wouldn't a '48 Dodge have a bolt rather than a stud and nut?I bought a parts car 48 Dodge years ago and the rear axle looked like it had sat in a river for a few years but I wanted to tear it down and salvage a few parts but the rims were still in place and figured I was going to have to battle 10 rusted lug nuts. Got my 6 pt socket and 1`/2 breaker bar and muscled up for the intial pull and the darn lug nut came off with almost no effort! Some saint had put never seize on the firggin lug nuts and studs at some point in the distant past....ever since then I put never seize on all my stuff!
So when you finally get everything back in shape don't forget to add a healthy dose of never seize to the studs before spinning on the lug nuts. ;)