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Alloy Wheel Lock Nut - Can’t Remove!

E

Eamonn

Messages
17
Location
monmouth
Vehicle
T6 Beach 102
Happy New Year all!

I have time to post this while waiting on the hard shoulder of a busy motorway late at night on New Year’s Day.

I picked up a puncture on the way home with my family and pulled in to the hard shoulder, where I removed the spare wheel and got to work removing the offending wheel. However, it is impossible to remove the locknut using the adapter provided!!! I cannot get enough purchase on the nut to loosen it, and it feels like I will round off the nut corners if I continue to try.

So, I’ve just ordered a taxi to come out and take my family home while I wait for a tow truck to come and get me.

I’m staggered that VW have used such a stupidly flawed system; in order to protect a 16” standard wheel from theft they have rendered it impossible for me to change a tyre!!!

Am I the only one to suffer from this?

D2AE50F7-AF30-4E39-B6E0-BE2C7048A057.jpeg
 
You really need a breaker bar with a right angle and one person to hold it on whilst the other leans on the bar.
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I’m just really surprised that it’s not possible to change a tyre *unless* you have brought specialist equipment. The spare tyre, jack and other equipment are redundant if it’s not possible to remove the lock nut.

Well done VW. Impressively stupid.
 
Looks like you have chewed the head of the puzzle but there. I carry a breaker bar and also make sure my nuts arent seized. You may get that off at home with help from some heat and mole grips. I tend also not to do up the locking bolts as tight as the rest of them. Good luck.
 
I had the same problem with mine. Had to get a garage to use a tiny drill to get mine off in the end.
Replaced them with a new set from VW. Bought all the kit...breaker bars, torque wrench. Guess what ... it happened again, after I suspect a garage over tightened them when I had brake pads replaced.
 
No problem with my Locking Bolts with the supplied Wheel Brace and adapter, but they should not be torqued to the same degree as the normal bolts.
 
All wheel bolts should be torqued according to manufacturers requirements. To suggest otherwise is potentially dangerous.
 
Not being able to undo the locking wheel nut is the least of your problems wait until you find the wheel stuck to the hub

A very good point. Just before Christmas when switching to winter wheels I found all four wheels were well and truly ‘stuck’ on the hubs of my one week old Cali. I was really pleased my local friendly tyre dealer was doing this on a ramp rather than me finding the problem when faced with a puncture by the side of the road using the standard scissor jack. I understand the problems of dissimilar corrosion (It doesn’t just happen with the Cali roof!) but was surprised at the level of corrosion on a new vehicle.

The tyre people buffed up and copper greased the hub/wheel interface so should be ok now. The comment from my local VW dealer was that they often find this problem when wheels are first taken off, they then do what my friendly tyre people did. If so, I question why this isn’t part of the PDI???
 
All wheel bolts should be torqued according to manufacturers requirements. To suggest otherwise is potentially dangerous.
And All tyre shops follow that religiously. In your dreams, and the vehicle manufacturers know that.
So I torque the Locking bolt to 10% below. Not had a problem since I started using Locking Nuts/Bolts many years ago and my local garage agrees. Never had a problem and never lost a bolt or wheel and able to change wheels myself if necessary using the supplied jack and wheel brace.
 
And All tyre shops follow that religiously. In your dreams, and the vehicle manufacturers know that.
So I torque the Locking bolt to 10% below. Not had a problem since I started using Locking Nuts/Bolts many years ago and my local garage agrees. Never had a problem and never lost a bolt or wheel and able to change wheels myself if necessary using the supplied jack and wheel brace.
The system is designed with redundancy against single failures. By not following the recommendations you are intentionally introducing a single failure.
The manufacturer isn’t responsible if their instructions aren’t adhered to.
It’s astonishing that you think you know better than the people who designed it.
Get the right tools for the job and torque it properly.
My first job when I was 16 was as a car mechanic. I torqued all the wheel bolts in a car, and it still fell off on the motorway. I still don’t know why. Fortunately he watched me do it. I’m a Chartered Engineer now with many years experience of things not working as expected....
 
I did ask VW and they are the figures i was given
Well that’s the acceptable range then, providing they are correct for your vehicle. Anywhere between 140 and 180 Elephants is acceptable. Don’t torque them to 140-10%, of the Elephants available.
 
Well that’s the acceptable range then, providing they are correct for your vehicle. Anywhere between 140 and 180 Elephants is acceptable. Don’t torque them to 140-10%, of the Elephants available.
So 4 at 180 Elephants and 1 at 162 would be Ok!
 
I had the same problem with VW locking wheel bolts. I had bought a spare one which meant that when you get that puncture in the early hours, when it's raining, etc you will always be able to find it. VW don't make it easy to identify which pattern you have so I had to buy 2 complete sets. Putting on the Winter wheels one of the unlocking bolts was damaged, then the spare was also becoming rounded.
I spoke to a local car firm who said that Halfords sell the kits to take them off for under £30 and unless your alloys were really expensive it was hardly worth using locking wheel bolts. I just use 5 standard bolts for each wheel now.
There are a few previous threads on this;
https://vwcaliforniaclub.com/thread...ter-lost-by-ats-euromaster.22131/#post-253494 Post#9 by @briwy gives a supplier of more robust locking bolts

Simon
 

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