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Sheered Front Wheel Stud

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11K views 47 replies 24 participants last post by  Ralf  
#1 ·
Evening Forum,

A slightly unfortunate/odd issue. I have just had my car detailed and this has happened when he came to torque it up. I've used this guy many times and have absolute confidence in his work and believe it is a manufacturing defect.

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I will obviously be going to my local dealer tomorrow, but does anyone know how hard a job this is going to be? I am hoping it will be covered under warrenty, but I have a feeling it won't be or potentially wriggled out of. Car is on 650 miles and this was the first time the wheel has been off/on since PDI.
 
#3 ·
I assume you have, but go and check the remaining bolts, if it’s a defect it could have affected a batch, if it’s your detailior they could have over torqued / cross threaded multiple bolts.

To clarify I am not blaming anyone but safety has to come first.

Not checking because you trust someone and then a wheel coming off a 70mph isn’t going to end well. again I’m not saying you haven’t checked or a person is at fault. But if there is something wrong, you may be risking yourself or others lives
 
#6 ·
I assume you have, but go and check the remaining bolts, if it's a defect it could have affected a batch, if it's your detailior they could have over torqued / cross threaded multiple bolts.

To clarify I am not blaming anyone but safety has to come first.

Not checking because you trust someone and then a wheel coming off a 70mph isn't going to end well. again I'm not saying you haven't checked or a person is at fault. But if there is something wrong, you may be risking yourself or others lives
Will do tomorrow morning, before I take it to Toyota.
 
#17 ·
Now there’s no pressure on the thread I would expect that to be able to be unscrewed by hand out of the nut. If it won’t then maybe it’s got something jammed in the thread or it’s bottomed out?
 
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#28 ·
I mustard mitt that I was surprised that the studs are aluminium, as 1) it's bound to have lower tensile strength than steel, and 2) differential corrosion is bound to be a longer term problem unless every other thing they touch is Al too.
 
#34 ·
Well going to throw a grenade into this thread, this car had a persistent clicking noise coming from the front wheel, this was the fix from a specialist independent garage. Draw your own conclusions I have used copper slip/anti seize for almost 50 years.

 
#44 ·
They are not aluminium, they are ferrous based, as a magnet is attracted to them. You never put lubricant on torqued threads unless the torque value specifies its been calculated that way, which is highly unlikely. Just ensure threads are clean, use a wire brush on old threads.
As these nuts don’t have tapered seat it’s possible to get them misaligned and damage the wheel as they are tightened, more so if done with impact wrench.

I’d put the failure down to user error.
 
#48 ·
So to close this out,

Car went into the local dealership, Toyota took all the details and had no problems replacing under warranty.

Which makes me wonder, has this been happening to others...
No, the occurence would be documented and suppliers informed, process es checked(eol or PDI, dealer) , maybe will lead to a revised manual or larger warning stickers etc etc etc etc.halo cars are monitored for longer period(up to a year or more) from the start of production

Such small issues, are also taken care of from the distributors own "good will budget" or even the dealers own good will budget .