Post by GuglioLS on Feb 3, 2008 18:52:31 GMT -5
After a big snow of 18 + inches and plowing the driveway for the “final” time, the wind picked up in a bad way – it blew hard all night.
The next day I had to leave the house for a work related trip. Our daughter Katie, left just a few minutes before me. Well she didn't’t make it to the top of the driveway. Her AWD RAV4 was buried in a snow drift! So me – dressed in business attire fired up the Jinma, then proceeded down the driveway to pull her out and re-plow for the umpteenth million time!
Along the way my steering wheel felt jerky – I looked down at the front wheels, the left front tire was wobbling in a bad way and I saw lug nuts FALLING OFF!
I stopped right there in the middle of the driveway, lowered the FEL bucket to lift the wheels off the ground. Then proceeded to walk to the shop to get the lug wrench.
Upon my return I attempted to tighten the nuts – not good, the lug threads were all chewed up. I did the best I could under the circumstances, but had to get my daughter out, clear the snow so that both of us could get going. I had a plane to catch!
I got her unstuck, plowed the snow drift, returned my poor baby to the barn and made a beeline to the airport.
Upon my return I assessed the damage –
This is as tight as I could get them – none of the nuts were seated against the wheel:
Stud threads got pretty chewed up:
I picked up a 14mm dia x 1.5 mm thread pitch die and chased the threads:
They came out good enough for now. I have new studs and lug nuts on the way from Affordable Tractor.
This is a pic of my Harbor freight lug wrench I use to chase the threads and tighten the lug nuts.
I got the wheel back on for now until I get all the parts. I will have to disassemble the front hub to drive the olds studs out.
All the red stuff you see on the wheel is NOT locktite!
I think what happened is all that 4 wheeling, back and forth pushing mountains of snow under high loads loosened them up. Honest, I tightened them up real good with that big “fancy” high leverage lug wrench – Two years ago
Moral of the Story – Check your Lug Nuts OFTEN!
(And every other nut, bolt and screw you can get to.)
Larry
The next day I had to leave the house for a work related trip. Our daughter Katie, left just a few minutes before me. Well she didn't’t make it to the top of the driveway. Her AWD RAV4 was buried in a snow drift! So me – dressed in business attire fired up the Jinma, then proceeded down the driveway to pull her out and re-plow for the umpteenth million time!
Along the way my steering wheel felt jerky – I looked down at the front wheels, the left front tire was wobbling in a bad way and I saw lug nuts FALLING OFF!
I stopped right there in the middle of the driveway, lowered the FEL bucket to lift the wheels off the ground. Then proceeded to walk to the shop to get the lug wrench.
Upon my return I attempted to tighten the nuts – not good, the lug threads were all chewed up. I did the best I could under the circumstances, but had to get my daughter out, clear the snow so that both of us could get going. I had a plane to catch!
I got her unstuck, plowed the snow drift, returned my poor baby to the barn and made a beeline to the airport.
Upon my return I assessed the damage –
This is as tight as I could get them – none of the nuts were seated against the wheel:
Stud threads got pretty chewed up:
I picked up a 14mm dia x 1.5 mm thread pitch die and chased the threads:
They came out good enough for now. I have new studs and lug nuts on the way from Affordable Tractor.
This is a pic of my Harbor freight lug wrench I use to chase the threads and tighten the lug nuts.
I got the wheel back on for now until I get all the parts. I will have to disassemble the front hub to drive the olds studs out.
All the red stuff you see on the wheel is NOT locktite!
I think what happened is all that 4 wheeling, back and forth pushing mountains of snow under high loads loosened them up. Honest, I tightened them up real good with that big “fancy” high leverage lug wrench – Two years ago
Moral of the Story – Check your Lug Nuts OFTEN!
(And every other nut, bolt and screw you can get to.)
Larry