roaniecowpony
Well-Known Member
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- #1
Lug nuts.
I recently had 37s installed on my JLUR. The wheels have small diameter deep bores for the lug nuts. The installer put on some cheap standard lug nuts that are truly a pain to install. The socket size cannot be more than 3/4" or it won't fit down the bore of the wheel. Yes, I could install some "spline" type lugs that are long and small in diameter. But, then if I lost the special socket or broke it on the trail, I'd be S.O.L. .
So, I looked and looked for some 3/4" hex 14mm x 1.5 lug nuts that were long enough to start by hand. That meant they had to be at least 2" long or preferably a bit longer.
I found that Dorman made some long "racing" lug nuts that were about 2.30" long and had a 3/4" hex. I ordered them from Amazon and they seemed to be the answer to my issue. But when I installed them, they wouldn't go all the way down to the wheel before they ran out of full cut thread. They also seemed to be pretty loose on the studs So, I bought a used thread gauge (go-not go) off ebay and a tap. The thread gauge showed most of them were ok with a few being oversize thread. So, I tapped about 10 of them deeper so they'd clamp down on the wheel. When I installed them, some of them would lock the socket into the wheel by bending the stud over slightly. I pulled them out and spun them on an axle stud where I could see the 60 degree cone. The cone was not concentric to the thread and wobbled as they were rotating. Crap. Literally. I read the box. They were made in China junk. It's not that they just would lock the socket in the wheel hole. The fact that they bend over the stud puts extreme load on the stud and will eventually break it.
My next effort was to find a US made lug nut, and one that was long enough to start by hand (2" minimum) and a small (for the 14mm thread size) hex of no more than 3/4" or 19mm. Gorilla indicated their lugs are made in the US and they had a 3/4" hex 14mm x 1.5 lug that was 2" long. They were also open ended which allowed them to be fully screwed on the studs to clamp the wheel. Another purchase of about $100 and they showed up. They looked great. They had a slightly larger diameter cone for more contact on the wheel (good) than the Dorman lugs. The cone ran true and concentric to the threads which would ensure that pressure from one sided contact of the wheel would not bend over the studs.
A little background on me. I started working in machine shops while in high school and later worked in a few of the large aerospace companies around southern California as well as many small shops. At some point in my 20s, I became a machined parts inspector. By my mid 30s, I had gone to college at night enough to pass testing as a manufacturing engineer and get a job at a large aircraft maker as a Quality Engineer. Later, I became a flight test engineer and on to certification/regulatory engineer. So, I am pretty intimate with machined parts. When I saw that the cone was not concentric with the threads, I knew I had another problem.
Bottom line...buy American made lug nuts.
There is no contact marks on one side of the cone on the China Dorman lug.
Here, you can see a full circle of contact on the Gorilla lug
I recently had 37s installed on my JLUR. The wheels have small diameter deep bores for the lug nuts. The installer put on some cheap standard lug nuts that are truly a pain to install. The socket size cannot be more than 3/4" or it won't fit down the bore of the wheel. Yes, I could install some "spline" type lugs that are long and small in diameter. But, then if I lost the special socket or broke it on the trail, I'd be S.O.L. .
So, I looked and looked for some 3/4" hex 14mm x 1.5 lug nuts that were long enough to start by hand. That meant they had to be at least 2" long or preferably a bit longer.
I found that Dorman made some long "racing" lug nuts that were about 2.30" long and had a 3/4" hex. I ordered them from Amazon and they seemed to be the answer to my issue. But when I installed them, they wouldn't go all the way down to the wheel before they ran out of full cut thread. They also seemed to be pretty loose on the studs So, I bought a used thread gauge (go-not go) off ebay and a tap. The thread gauge showed most of them were ok with a few being oversize thread. So, I tapped about 10 of them deeper so they'd clamp down on the wheel. When I installed them, some of them would lock the socket into the wheel by bending the stud over slightly. I pulled them out and spun them on an axle stud where I could see the 60 degree cone. The cone was not concentric to the thread and wobbled as they were rotating. Crap. Literally. I read the box. They were made in China junk. It's not that they just would lock the socket in the wheel hole. The fact that they bend over the stud puts extreme load on the stud and will eventually break it.
My next effort was to find a US made lug nut, and one that was long enough to start by hand (2" minimum) and a small (for the 14mm thread size) hex of no more than 3/4" or 19mm. Gorilla indicated their lugs are made in the US and they had a 3/4" hex 14mm x 1.5 lug that was 2" long. They were also open ended which allowed them to be fully screwed on the studs to clamp the wheel. Another purchase of about $100 and they showed up. They looked great. They had a slightly larger diameter cone for more contact on the wheel (good) than the Dorman lugs. The cone ran true and concentric to the threads which would ensure that pressure from one sided contact of the wheel would not bend over the studs.
A little background on me. I started working in machine shops while in high school and later worked in a few of the large aerospace companies around southern California as well as many small shops. At some point in my 20s, I became a machined parts inspector. By my mid 30s, I had gone to college at night enough to pass testing as a manufacturing engineer and get a job at a large aircraft maker as a Quality Engineer. Later, I became a flight test engineer and on to certification/regulatory engineer. So, I am pretty intimate with machined parts. When I saw that the cone was not concentric with the threads, I knew I had another problem.
Bottom line...buy American made lug nuts.
There is no contact marks on one side of the cone on the China Dorman lug.
Here, you can see a full circle of contact on the Gorilla lug
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