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I AM SO ANGRY re: oil change!!!

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by Julia2001, Aug 5, 2012.

  1. dorunron

    dorunron Senior Member

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    Anyone can damage expensive wheels/parts etc. if they are not careful. If care is used, a impact type wrench can be used safely, and correctly. I have used many impact tools over the years with torque limiter's and I have found they work properly if care is used and they are set properly. It is like any other tool, it can used or misused. It boils down to the operater and the operation thereof.
     
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  2. usnavystgc

    usnavystgc Die Hard DIYer and Ebike enthusiast.

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    You always got my back Ron. I appreciate that!!!! :)
     
  3. a_gray_prius

    a_gray_prius Rare Non-Old-Blowhard Priuschat Member

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    An impact wrench, even with a torque limiter will still damage aluminum lugnuts. There's a conversation like this on NASIOC: Torque Wheel Lug Nuts - Impact Wrench - NASIOC (where most won't use an impact wrench for installation, only removal) and Bimmerforums: Torque Limiting Impact Socket -- Worth it? - Bimmerforums - The Ultimate BMW Forum (where one guy has had no problem with using an impact wrench, but others will still install with a proper torque wrench)

    Do whatever you want - it's your stuff.
     
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  4. dhanson865

    dhanson865 Expert and Devil's advocate

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    I laughed at all the mentions of metal pipe to use as a breaker bar.

    When I swapped spark plugs on my Saturn a couple of months ago I needed a breaker bar so I just reached over and grabbed a long PVC pipe of the appropriate thickness that happened to be nearby. It bends but it gave me enough leverage even with the bend to break loose the spark plug I couldn't free with the metal tool alone.

    PVC might not work for your worst case need for a breaker bar but it is also good to keep an open mind so you aren't freaking out on a weakend or dark night.
     
  5. dorunron

    dorunron Senior Member

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    Hmmm, after reading both pages on both links, what I got out of it was that folks were not concerned about the lug nuts being tight enough if they used torque limits of say 80 lbs. Most of them were still following up with a torque wrench. Only a couple of post's even mentioned that old used flex torque attachments were not accurate. I don't understand where you are getting "damaging aluminum lug nuts" from unless the operator of tool is allowing the impact wrench to hammer excessively. Then there could be a possibility of over torque.

    Like I said earlier, in my opinion it boils down to the operator and the operation thereof.

    I base this on this example. I can overtorque anything, even with a torque wrench. How would I do that? Simple, keep tightening after the click or after the dial/beam reads the specified torque. However, by my actions I have incorrectly used the tool. Hence my statement of operator and operation of the tool. If you don't know how to use the tool, then you really should not be doing the work at all.

    Ron (dorunron)
     
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  6. jabecker

    jabecker driver of Prii since 2005

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    Can't add anything to the talk of tools, etc. But I do have some experience with tires. My first car was a Ford Pinto. It came with a particular type of Firestone radials that had splitting sidewalls. Usually they split when I was barreling down the freeway at 70 MPH, but sometimes they surprised me in a parking lot. I was right out of high school, living in a dorm room, and had little money and no tools beyond what came with the car. I couldn't afford to buy a new set of tires of some other brand. But Firestone kept replacing them for me, until eventually they were recalled and I got a whole new set just before I traded the car in.

    I became quite proficient at changing tires. In my heyday, I could jack up the car, whip a tire off, put the spare on, throw everything in the back, and be on my way to the nearest Firestone store in about 10 minutes. I loosened the lug nuts with a good kick, and tightened them the same way. Never had a problem with them falling off. (I know some of you guys are shaking your heads, out there.)

    The last time I changed a tire on that car, my right arm was in a cast because of a broken wrist. I had to lever the spare up using my left arm while holding it in place with my right knee. Same process to get the flat into the back. It's amazing what you can do when you have to.

    I do not miss that car in any way. I was never sure if the potentially exploding gas tank or the Firestone tires would kill me. Now I have AAA.
     
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  7. wick1ert

    wick1ert Senior Member

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    Ok, in an effort to assist the OP and any others interested/in need of some of the tools mentioned in this thread, I figured I'd try to get us back on topic a little bit.

    I got my Harbor Freight flyer in the mail today, and there are 2 coupons that are VERY good for the torque wrench and for a floor jack. They also have very reasonable shipping costs, although the floor jack may not be covered due to the weight. I don't know off hand if they allow for in store pick-up of online purchases or not. If you prefer to go to the store to get your items, they usually have flyers with coupons sitting right at the door.

    Torque Wrench: 67636113 for $9.99 1/4", 3/8", or 1/2"
    Floor Jack: 95148478 for $69.99 - rapid pump 3 ton steel floor jack

    It states the floor jack weighs 74 lbs, so for our OP she might have to "HULK UP" first!
     
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  8. Mike500

    Mike500 Senior Member

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    I own all three of the torque wrenches. For most, the 3/8 inch one is most useful. They compare well to my Snap ON and KD models.

    I would, however, buy their aluminum racing jacke. I have two of them. They weigh just over 20 pounds each, and I cary one in my Prius"v." One is over 10 years old and still works just fine.
     
  9. wick1ert

    wick1ert Senior Member

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    I agree with the aluminum recommendation, but I don't have the coupon code readily available on that one. It's usually $79.99-99.99 at various times. I figured at $69.99, it might be worth the deal for Julia or others. I'll see if I can find a coupon code for the aluminum one - they're in almost all the magazines I get.
     
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  10. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    Oh man now they got you buying torque wrenches.:confused: Save your money.
    I own a couple of breaker bars that I never use. I used one of mine 2 years ago to fix my other car. Front wheel bearing required 212 ft lbs to get a 32 mm nut off. 1/2 bar and 6 feet of pipe and it was still a struggle.

    I've been thinking about you doing a tire rotation and I think you better off not doing it yourself. Its just to physical.
    Its very hard. Not only do you have to jack the car up on all sides you have to remove the lug nuts which will be a struggle and then the fun begins getting the tire off the hub. Plan on having to kick the crap out of the tire to break it off the hub. Prius wheels tend to get stuck on the hub from galvanization.
    Most people have to loosen all the lugs and then drop the car on a loose wheel to break it off the hub.
    Thyen remove and re-instal all 4 tires and 20 lugnuts. Lots of kneeling. And there pretty heavy little wheels. To re-install the tires you basicly have to hold the tire out in front of you to line it up with the wheel studs while you sitting on the ground. Its not easy and takes alot of arm strength. If your determind find something around 35 lbs in your house and hold it out in front of you for 20 seconds while sitting cross legged on the ground. Thats what its like x's 4.
    Nothings really accomplished if you hurt yourself. Pull a muscle in your arm or back and it takes months to heal.
    Just not worth it.
    I do applaud your spunk though.
     
  11. dorunron

    dorunron Senior Member

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    Have you ever tried putting a tire on like the trucker's do?

    Try this.

    If you have a large pry bar you can place the pry bar under the wheel and raise the pry bar and this will raise the wheel to the axle. You will just need to lift it on the studs once the wheel is on the axle.

    I think in Julia's case, she might find that if she tried that, she could mount the tires very easily.
     
  12. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    The little center hub with the castlenut does not allow you to hang the wheel on it. Still have to hold it free air to find the studs. Would be very hard for a 110 pound lady. Hell it doesn't feel that good for me.
    And with a pry bar she would have to hold the tire with one hand while wrangling a big pry bar in the other . Now she's buying a pry bar? Hold the tire up on a pry bar while jiggling it back and forth to hit the studs. And how do you get the car so perfectly aligned height wise you only need to pry it up an inch or 2. Any higher than that and then your balancing the tire on the end of a pry bar up in the air against a pry block. That sounds really hard.
     
  13. dorunron

    dorunron Senior Member

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    Look at what the guy is doing at 2:17 in the video.

    Yeah, it looks hard, but the theory is there. It eliminates having to lift the tires with the legs. Use jacks and stands are have the tires just off the ground when you are removing and replacing them. With the Prius tires, it should be very easy.

    Also, a 2X4 would work just fine so she would not have to buy a pry bar.
     
  14. Curiousgb

    Curiousgb New Member

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    I have a little trick I use for holding the wheels up while I mount them. I don't raise the car up more than enough to remove the wheels. When I am ready to mount the wheel, I sit in front of the hub with my feet straddling the wheel. I then lift the wheel with my feet. It is really easy.
     
  15. Curiousgb

    Curiousgb New Member

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    I need a motrin after that.
     
  16. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    So the car is not on a jackstand just on a jack?
     
  17. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    Yeah but the hub is only a fraction of an inch above the wheel on the ground in the video. Thats's how it has to be because the wheel is so heavy you can't lift it. And its much safer than just a jack as its on a lift adjusted low.

    How do you get that exact distance SAFELY without alot of jacking and fussing in your driveway?
    Unless your mounting a wheel with just a jack holding the car up. :eek:
     
  18. dorunron

    dorunron Senior Member

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    Break the lug nuts down first.

    Raise one side up until the front wheel just clears the ground, and set the first jack stand. Then raise the back wheel until it clears and set the second stand. Naturally, the front wheel will be a little higher now than the back, but you can still work with it. Remove the lug nuts, knock the wheels off if they are stuck, and rotate the tires. Use the pry bar (lever) to lift the tire up and slip it onto the studs. The only trick is having the lug nut hole lined up with the studs. All you have to do is visualize the clock position, and then rotate the tire a little bit one way or the other, then pick it up with the lever.

    I think you know how to finish the job.

    Think of it like this. The Egyptians built the Pyramids using levers. All we are doing is lifting a tire, they were moving stones.

    One final point, the reason we are using the lever method is because the OP Julia may not be able to lift the tires. Using a lever, she should be able to lift them easier.

    When I was a young man, I did this sort of work. That is why I know about it. I still utilize the trick today if I have to change a tire as I am too weak like the OP might be to lift the tire.
     
  19. Julia2001

    Julia2001 Member

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    Well ... I really want to thank ALL of you for all of the time and energy you have put into offering instructions and ideas to me on this subject.

    I'm kind of thinking I'm with the gentleman who thinks it might not be worthwhile for me to do the rotations myself, but simply mark the tires when I have the snows put on/off, and have the guys at the dealership rotate them when they mount the tires each time.

    Also, although I AM going to learn to use the jack that comes with the car in case I ever need it, I do have AAA to back me up in an emergency.

    As I have said before in this forum, I can learn HOW to do anything --- but I am not physically as strong as the rest of you and in reality that can be a hindrance in certain jobs. Im not suggesting for a minute that SOME women aren't strong enough ... But I'm not one of them. I'm not a large person. It's jus reality. But there are many mechanical bs which I can do .. And have done over the years...and I will continue to do those.

    For example, I have only one key fob and so I bought another online from a Toyota dealership in Cleveland for less than half the price my local dealership was going to charge me, and I intend to program my car to accept the new fob myself. Doesn't require brute strength, so I'm gonna give it a go. :)

    Thank you all again. There is much VERY useful information in this thread, and I will use it and I appreciate it very, very much. I'm still getting a breaker bar and I LOVE knowing how to get bolts and things loose without asking my neighbor for assistance next time!

    Thank you all again. I look forward to seeing you all around the forum.

    Julia
     
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  20. maestro8

    maestro8 Nouveau Member

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    A couple general rules in this vein:
    1) If you find you need a lot of strength to do something, you're probably doing it wrong... and you might break something in the process.
    2) If you are using a lot of strength to do something, you're not using the right tool(s).

    Let me get this straight. You're greasing the bolts that are holding the wheels onto your car... so they come out easier? Can you paint a big red X on your car so we all know to stay away from you? :)

    Yes, many people have been able to survive driving around with greased wheel bolts, but that doesn't make it a great idea. Be careful torquing those wheel bolts (you are torquing them, yes?) Manufacturer torque specs are generally for dry threads, and greased threads require less torque.