The Denver Post

Tighter Doesn’t Always Mean More Secure with Lug Nuts

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Dear Car Talk:

Q The wife of a couple we’ve known forever was driving her 10-year-old Subaru Outback, when three of her lug nuts sheared off, and the other two came out. She pulled over and, somehow, the wheel stayed on the car.

The car had just had the tires rotated at a Subaru dealership. The simple answer is that the lug nuts were not tightened enough. The dealership stepped up and paid for towing, a newwheel and a car rental.

OK, so what’s the question? Two weeks later, it happened again on another wheel. Neither the dealer nor Subaru have any answers. If it were my wife’s car, either the car or

I would be gone! Thoughts? -- Tom

A yeah. The dealership didn’t fail to tighten the lug nuts, Tom. They tightened them way too much.

Each wheel hub on the car has five “wheel bolts” that stick out. You hang the wheel on those five bolts, and then you use lug nuts to hold the wheel in place. But if you grossly over tighten the lug nuts, you end up pulling -- and then actually stretching -- those wheel bolts. And when you stretch metal and deform it, you weaken it, and -- as your friend found out -- it can break.

Then, once one bolt breaks, the pressure increases on the remaining bolts, making them more vulnerable to breaking, right? Now you’re trying to hold the wheel on with only four bolts, and each one has 25% more work to do. Then another breaks, and you’re going around a corner at 50 mph with only three bolts holding the wheel on. At some point, the rest of them just shear off, and the result is calamity. How does this mistake happen? Well, an inexperien­ced technician might be given “simple” jobs at first that he “can’t screw up.” Like rotating tires. But if he sets his torque wrench to 500 pounds instead of 80 pounds -- thinking “if loose is bad, tighter is better” -- he’d stretch the heck out of those bolts.

So, what to do? At the very least, the dealership ought to replace every single one of your friend’s wheel bolts. They’re all suspect, in my view. Second, they probably ought to have their technician­s use something called torque sticks, which go between the wrench and the nuts, and limit the amount of torque that can be applied.

And third, they ought to go through their service records and call in every surviving customer whose car that technician worked on. It’s likely there are other people driving around with overtighte­ned, failed or failing wheel bolts that all need to be replaced.

And they may not be as lucky as your friend was, Tom.

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