willy
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Hi does any one have the torque LBS for a M35A3 wheel nuts
I did not find in my manual
Willy
I did not find in my manual
Willy
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I beg to differ. I am not sure why my lug studs broke other than over tightening. I used a 5 foot bar and bounced several times till I heard the "crack" or pop on each one. Usually at least two pops. I weigh 180.If your putting them on by hand, with a cheeter pipe, tighten them till they POP. That was the industry standard, before air wrenches. You won't break them, and they won't come off! It takes a 5' cheeter pipe, 1" schedule 80, so you won't bend it! You might have to bounce on it, to get the job done.
I've got a 600ftlb torque wrench, no extension needed. Plenty of leverage.Oh, so it's about #%& to #&% foot pounds then!!! You'll need a good extension on the torque wrench to get that much. So the Op does some searching, the symbols I used are at the top of the numbers on his keyboard in my post.
I fully agree with this. It really isn't rocket science and torque wrenches can be very inaccurate based on how they are used and treated. As a kid, I was taught by the mechanics I worked for (for free no less) that on a standard 12" wrench, a 'grunt' was pretty consistently 80 ftlbs. I called BS and we actually put a bet on it and checked it with a torque wrench. They were right to within about 10% on multiple tries. They used to spec torque (except for heads) in 'grunts' - 1 grunt, half grunt, etc.I would think that using your arms and hands at specific length of mechanical advantage from your socket would be a more accurate method of tightening than using a pipe longer that it really needs to be.