Because of this thread I bought the broken thimble tool plus a very pricy torque wrench to do my wheel nuts. This is because now with the 915 freightliner and my trailer with the new S cam axle I hope to be on the road more. A friend is trying to talk me into the cross country military convoy for one.
I myself will still go dry except for the couple of drops of oil Webb says I ok. I do believe in the over torque or incorrect torque thing happening with to much of the wrong stuff. My new trailer axle has all new studs and nuts so I am not worried about any damage to the studs or nuts right now.
The 915 stuff looks like they have on newer stuff but don't know about the studs. One thing that was said on everything I could find was to retorque 100 miles after first install. When I first got my trailer back with the new axle they did not tighten the thimble tighter then the outer nut and I had a little trouble changing out my 22.5 to 24.5 tires. If my torque specs say 450 to 500 then I will go 500 on the thimble and maybe 450 on the nuts. In another post thread you said there was a mechanic fired because of a wheel nut problem. Could this have been caused because he did not see a problem with the studs and locking hardware and used old stuff. To say just because someone is not an ASE mechanic they don't know anything I feel is wrong. Maybe it takes an engineer or other person in the field to see problems like maybe the best person to make peace is not a warrior. Guess it is up to the OP to decide what to use and when to change out bad parts and use correct torque values. The only thing that was never said what the torque difference between wet and dry torque. If my thimbles go 500 what do they go when anti-seize is used? I did find this From Webb.
http://webbwheel.com/pdfs/literature/TorqueBrochure0409.pdf