Jon|3.7
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- Jun 21, 2015
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- 15' 3.7 Mustang
had a guy torque mine to 175! guy putting my new wheels had trouble taking it off
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ya you can get a lug stuck like that.had a guy torque mine to 175! guy putting my new wheels had trouble taking it off
LmaoThat makes sense Scott. Side note I use to live in Elkton Pa. Dated a red head girl from Oxford. Met her in Vegas, chased her back East..lol. Damn red heads!
lol yeah those red heads get you, I dated one a long time ago, also from Oxford, she wasn't named Allie was she? :lol:That makes sense Scott. Side note I use to live in Elkton Pa. Dated a red head girl from Oxford. Met her in Vegas, chased her back East..lol. Damn red heads!
I meant Maryland but you could walk to Pa.
That's a bit concerning that someone partially recommends something based on what they have done in the past disregarding the actual physics behind it. I'm glad you're honest and you did admit that...but that's not exactly the answer most of us want to hear for you reasoning to go with that torque value.Part of it is because it has just been done this way as long as I have been in the business
It is understandable and that is why I am being involved in this thread, because I know other vendors would not jump in this thread to speak due to getting "heat" but reality is this mostly every vendor does 100 ft lbs.That's a bit concerning that someone partially recommends something based on what they have done in the past disregarding the actual physics behind it. I'm glad you're honest and you did admit that...but that's not exactly the answer most of us want to hear for you reasoning to go with that torque value.
And that answer just makes me more confident in my choice to run the 150lbs that Ford recommends and not the 100lbs that some people are recommending. One does it because of physics and testing of the actual hardware and the other does it just because that's what they have done in the past.
Well That is a strong factor to consider, reason being is that forged Aluminium lugs used for racing are typcially torqued at 90-100 depending from what I remember my buddies doing.Concerning the aftermarket wheel manufacturers recommending 100 ft/lbs and the subsequent comments about physics, did anybody consider that the nuts supplied by the aftermarket manufacturer may be made out of a different quality steel and would fail at 148/150 ft/lbs.