[AT] OT--truck wheel torque
Cecil Bearden
crbearden at copper.net
Tue Oct 5 20:23:55 PDT 2010
the manufacturers recommemdations are in most of the service manuals and may
be in the owners manual. Later models are different from the old ones.
Some actually have a disc washer that keeps tension on the wlheel. They
should also abe tightened again after a few thousand miles. A 4 ft pipe on
the wrench is entirely too tight in my opinion. I tightened my old 2 ton
chevy and ford trucks with my old impact wrench for years and it was a 250
ft lb rated impact wrench. I never had a wheel come loose hauling wheat,
hay or cattle. I also use never seize on all my lug nuts to help lubricate
where the nut seats on the wheel. It makes a lot of difference when you have
to remove them. The wheel studs I coat with never seize also. I use it on
all my tractors and vehicles. I ahve not had a wheel come off because of
it, but when I have to take off a wheel on the side of the road, it sure
saves my arm...
Cecil in OKla
----- Original Message -----
From: "john hall" <jtchall at nc.rr.com>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Tuesday, October 05, 2010 8:52 PM
Subject: [AT] OT--truck wheel torque
> What's your rule of thumb for how tight lug nuts on a 2-ton truck should
> be? I put on a couple new tires and rotated some others. I tightned them
> with a 4 foot pipe on the wrench. Sometimes you could hear them "pop". One
> wheel was so tight it took a 6 foot pipe to break the nuts loose, one nut
> had to be heated..
>
> John Hall
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