So as we all know the lug nuts must be torqued at 107 Ft-Lbs. Great! But who can tell me what kind of torque is required to loosen a lug nut that was torqued at 107 Ft-Lbs? I spent some time researching this and every article I found stated that THEORETICALLY (i.e. according to laws of physics) a lug nut torqued at 107 Ft-Lbs requires 107 Ft-Lbs to loosen it.
What happens in real life is slightly different. Since I rotate my tires after 1-2 track sessions I decided to get a cordless electric impact wrench to convert a 20-min tire change to a 5-min one. First I bought a LongAcre Racing pit impact gun (http://www.longacreracing.com/produc...y+%26+Charger).
Rated at 330 Ft-Lbs and according to the web site "pops lug nuts off easily". My ass. I own multiple LongAcre Racing tools and they are ALL top notch quality. This thing felt like crap. Cheap distorted plastic with unfinished seams all around, stickers peeling off, battery dies after 8 tire changes. The shaft was crooked. Obviously made in China. Best part? It could NOT loosen the lug nuts on the ACR.
So I returned the tool and did some more research. Settled on a Milwaukee 2754-22CT (https://www.milwaukeetool.com/power-...ess/2754-22ct) Rated at 210 ft-lbs, which is almost twice the torque required to undo ACR lug nuts. Got the tool. Feels very high quality. Very compact and practical. One problem though. Does NOT loosen freaking lug nuts! Tried it several times...no go.
P.S. I read about all the caveats - how lug nuts require more loosening torque due to being corroded and contaminated. I read how temperature difference makes lug nuts harder to undo. Forget all that. With my car sitting in the garage, turned off for days, with everything cold, with lug nuts and studs crystal clean, if I torque a lug nut at 107 ft-lbs, I can NOT loosen it with either one of the tools.
How much torque do I _REALLY_ need in a cordless electric impact wrench to undo the damn lug nuts?
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