โOct-16-2016 07:06 AM
โOct-31-2016 10:30 AM
coolbreeze01 wrote:I'd bet it was correct enough to keep customer's cars on the road. ๐westend wrote:coolbreeze01 wrote:You may wish to think that was the case but few shops even had a pneumatic impact in their shop more than 50 years ago. If the year 1966 is used as the limit of your reference, think of what style of rim and tire were in use during that period. At that time, truck and heavy equipment shops may have started with pneumatic tools but the rest of us wrench benders were relegated to hand tools and a cheater bar.Cummins12V98 wrote:
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
The above method has been used by reputable tire shops for over 50 years.
For grins, History of Discount Tire
If you didn't have an air wrench 50 years ago, you may have done it correctly :B
โOct-31-2016 09:42 AM
westend wrote:coolbreeze01 wrote:You may wish to think that was the case but few shops even had a pneumatic impact in their shop more than 50 years ago. If the year 1966 is used as the limit of your reference, think of what style of rim and tire were in use during that period. At that time, truck and heavy equipment shops may have started with pneumatic tools but the rest of us wrench benders were relegated to hand tools and a cheater bar.Cummins12V98 wrote:
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
The above method has been used by reputable tire shops for over 50 years.
For grins, History of Discount Tire
โOct-30-2016 04:00 PM
westend wrote:It ain't rocket science folks.
Nope, for that, NASA emails the design for your 3D printer:
NASA printed torque wrench
โOct-30-2016 02:52 PM
dave54 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
...
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
...
My owners manual specifically says to three step the lug nut torque. So I make the shop do it to 35. Reset the wrench to 70 and tighten again. Then the final tightening to 105. Each in the cross pattern. It is a real PITA and the shop people do not like it, but tough! My rig, my money, and follow the specs. No running them up to snug in a circle.
โOct-30-2016 11:21 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
...
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
...
โOct-30-2016 11:04 AM
โOct-30-2016 11:02 AM
โOct-30-2016 10:16 AM
fj12ryder wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:You need to tell most of the shops around here, apparently they haven't gotten the memo. ๐ I don't know how many tires I've personally removed, or heard about from friends and relatives, that are tightened way above the torque settings. I've loosened more lug nuts that are too tight than ones that are too loose or just right.
"I have never seen a normal tire shop use bar type, click type, or any type of torque wrenches to put on tire lug nuts"
Well Sir you are going to all the wrong half AZZ places!
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
NO way would I let anyone use Torque Sticks!!!
As far as torque wrenches go, I would no way use an inferior torque wrench. Look on CL and Ebay. I bought two Proto torque wrenches that a guy bought for one Jeep project. I paid $100 each. I could not tell they had been used.
Just because you think it doesn't happen doesn't make it so. There are many more half-azz shops than there are good ones.
That Proto wrench may look perfect but looks and function sometimes can be worlds apart. All it would take is a couple times of using it for a breaker bar to loosen nuts/bolts for it to be out of whack. But it still looks great. Price doesn't necessarily indicate quality, sometimes it just indicates price.
โOct-30-2016 09:57 AM
โOct-30-2016 07:46 AM
coolbreeze01 wrote:You may wish to think that was the case but few shops even had a pneumatic impact in their shop more than 50 years ago. If the year 1966 is used as the limit of your reference, think of what style of rim and tire were in use during that period. At that time, truck and heavy equipment shops may have started with pneumatic tools but the rest of us wrench benders were relegated to hand tools and a cheater bar.Cummins12V98 wrote:
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
The above method has been used by reputable tire shops for over 50 years.
โOct-30-2016 07:46 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:You need to tell most of the shops around here, apparently they haven't gotten the memo. ๐ I don't know how many tires I've personally removed, or heard about from friends and relatives, that are tightened way above the torque settings. I've loosened more lug nuts that are too tight than ones that are too loose or just right.
"I have never seen a normal tire shop use bar type, click type, or any type of torque wrenches to put on tire lug nuts"
Well Sir you are going to all the wrong half AZZ places!
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
NO way would I let anyone use Torque Sticks!!!
As far as torque wrenches go, I would no way use an inferior torque wrench. Look on CL and Ebay. I bought two Proto torque wrenches that a guy bought for one Jeep project. I paid $100 each. I could not tell they had been used.
โOct-30-2016 07:36 AM
coolbreeze01 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
The above method has been used by reputable tire shops for over 50 years.
โOct-30-2016 07:28 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
Discount Tire hand starts the lug nuts then runs them up with a light setting on impact just enough to snug the nuts. Then they torque to spec in a cross pattern then they go in a circle for a final time. If the tire shop you use does not do that it's just being plain LAZY!
โOct-30-2016 06:27 AM