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If you don't have a torque wrench just use the lug wrench that came with the truck and tighten the crap out of them. I am sure you can put 140 ft lbs on it if you are not a girley mon yaa!
came back from the shop, there was nothing wrong with my wheel studs. the frist guy must not had his wheaties that morning.
i have an air compressor with a bunch of attachments so i just put the GM SUV attachment on and it works great. learn alot in auto tech. its amazing how simple auto repair has gotton, although i just rotate my own tires, insted of paying the dealer 300 for the 30k check up where they change the oil rotate the tires and check the fluid levels, i can do that for free in my own garage. :adr:![]()
Apply to torqueing wheel lugs?
140lbs of torque for wheels is retarded high. 90-100 lbs is fine for most anything on the road that we drive.
Keep in mind that it's not just how tight but that the torque is applied evenly across the lugs & in a star pattern. If you just torque the crap out of them unevenly and without using either a torque wrench or an impact gun with a torque stick you risk potentially warping the brake rotor and causing a nasty pulsation under applied braking. Those ratings in the manual aren't determined at random, they're intended to cover all potential driving conditions for the vehicle and factor in the weight of the wheel/tire combo. 140 may sound high but I wouldn't reduce it to 90-100 blindly. Given what the 20" combo must weigh I'd take engineers who came up with 140 at their word.