On new, non-swelled Ford lug nuts, 13/16" (.8125") actually fits better than 21mm (.8267"). My Klein Tools 3/4"-13/16" flip socket.Agree in spirit but Maverick's have 21mm, not 19.
Oops, you're correct. I was looking at the socket for my Fusion, not the one for the Mav. Sorry!Agree in spirit but Maverick's have 21mm, not 19.
This is exactly the problem...I just did brakes on my wife's 17 navigator and it had the dumb chrome covers on the lugs and they just spun..a 45 min to hr job turned into a 6 hour jobDon't the Ford lug nuts have a trim cap over the actual nut?
I've heard that recently on this or another forum, and I've also run into it "out in the wild" when i stopped to a few years ago to help an older woman in a Lincoln that had a flat - the nut was on tight and the outer cap cracked as i tried to loosen it. The actual lug nut underneath was a smaller size, and the factory wrench would not fit the nut underneath. I had to jam parts of the cracked cover cap into the wrench to get a grip on the nut.
I had never run into that issue before, but I'd never changed a tire on a Ford before.
The forum post recommended removing the factory nuts and replacing them with solid steel nuts with the same size.
On my 2022 EB a 13/16” fits snugger than a 21mm socketAgree in spirit but Maverick's have 21mm, not 19.
Using an impact wrench on correctly torqued wheel nuts won't "shred" any "bolts". That nut was cross-threaded and rammed home at the factory. That, or the roadside tech used the wrong socket and rounded off the nut.I think Mr. Nascar forgot to losen the nuts from the bolts with a breaker bar first, then speed remove the nuts. Using an impact wrench on these soft threaded bolts is asking for a shredded bolt thread. What I do is:
While the car/truck is on the ground, with the weight of the truck on all for wheels is get a good old fashioned breaker bar and losen all the bolts. A breaker bar allows one to use their own weight to losen the tightest of bolts. The weight of the truck also keeps the bolts secure and in place as the nut is loosened.
Then I use my powered wrench to remove the nuts, and again, I rotate to each nut a little at a time till they are sufficiently loose. THEN I raise the car/truck, hand loosen the nuts and I am done.
I learned this the hard way!
Yes, what Curtis said is the proper way to remove a wheel. The OEM lugs suck and I have replaced all of them with solid lugs.I think Mr. Nascar forgot to losen the nuts from the bolts with a breaker bar first, then speed remove the nuts. Using an impact wrench on these soft threaded bolts is asking for a shredded bolt thread. What I do is:
While the car/truck is on the ground, with the weight of the truck on all for wheels is get a good old fashioned breaker bar and losen all the bolts. A breaker bar allows one to use their own weight to losen the tightest of bolts. The weight of the truck also keeps the bolts secure and in place as the nut is loosened.
Then I use my powered wrench to remove the nuts, and again, I rotate to each nut a little at a time till they are sufficiently loose. THEN I raise the car/truck, hand loosen the nuts and I am done.
I learned this the hard way!
I had to replace 5 shredded studs doing this wrong!!Yes, what Curtis said is the proper way to remove a wheel. The OEM lugs suck and I have replaced all of them with solid lugs.
Damn! I use a torque wrench to break the lugs free by hand. I do all five then use a battery hammer drill to buzz them off after lifting the vehicle and to buzz them back on, then torque them to the recommended number. I am a Porsche race tech and scrutineer. We only put racing wheels on to 96-98 Foot pounds. I was shocked to see ford recommended 140-150, heck Newer Lotus track cars are at 74-78 fp (they have an odd size lug to slow mechanics down and make them contemplate “why” before cranking the lugs on too tight)I had to replace 5 shredded studs doing this wrong!!
Whenever I get new tires, the idiots at your local tire shop always over tighten the lugs.Damn! I use a torque wrench to break the lugs free by hand. I do all five then use a battery hammer drill to buzz them off after lifting the vehicle and to buzz them back on, then torque them to the recommended number. I am a Porsche race tech and scrutineer. We only put racing wheels on to 96-98 Foot pounds. I was shocked to see ford recommended 140-150, heck Newer Lotus track cars are at 74-78 fp (they have an odd size lug to slow mechanics down and make them contemplate “why” before cranking the lugs on too tight)
Yes a breaker bar will remove it but you will need a new bolt. Did this a couple of times for my CR-V. Not cheap but.Couldn't get it off? Sounds crossthreaded, not stripped.