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Yep, keep meaning to buy a spare for longer journeys.
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The pressure you can exert on the wheel brace is dependent on
(a) length of the bar and position on the bar force is applied (b) amount of rotational force applied Thankfully, the lord made me rather large and heavy, and it seems that in this rare case, my bulk wins over you skinny minnies as standing on any breaker bar has always got my nuts undone... (oo-er) :D |
Although as I have discovered, with a long bar for greater leverage it is very easy to turn slightly off centre and the 'key' for the locking nuts slips and burrs the nut. Happily I got it off and back on again, but needed a new set of locking nuts. [oo-er +1]
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Yeah locking nuts are only done up just over hand tight on my 8.
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I am tightning mine at 120 newton meter and use cobber-grease on them(so they do not rust together in there... More than 120 nm could damage your alloys I believe(if you stand on it with the weight of 100 kg... I would assume you go between 200 and 300 nm of tight'ning torque) Just my 2 cent:) /Jake |
Just to get technical I think the torque setting for the wheel BOLTS will be an ungreased value, as this is how it would have left the factory. Greased bolts should require less torque, as the tightening of a stud is basically tension, so as it comes tight the bolt stretches and it is this that holds it tight. Lubricated this stretching happens sooner than dry and as such the torque value decreased.
But in the real world it wouldn't make much difference on a wheel stud and nut or wheel bolt. And wheel nuts / bolts should be checked weekly. |
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