Charlie Smith wrote:
I broke a wheel stud this past weekend when putting my street tires back on the car. I did not cross thread it. It hand tightened fine most of the way. Anyway, it seems like this is a common occurence with autocrossers.
After thinking about it this week, I have a theory. Both the stud and lugnut expand under the extreme heat during a run. I believe that the lugnut cools faster than the stud, making it very tight around the stud. When I removed it after my last run, I believe that it damaged the lugnut's threads. Any comments on my theory or have one of your own?
[snip]
Charlie
I could be wrong... but Charlie I don't think your theory of the lug nut cooling faster than the stud is the problem. I supect the stud is failing because of excessive tension along the longitudinal axis. In your theory, the cooling lug nut would put some degree of compressive stress on the stud at the point of contact, and may cause a slight effective change in the pitch of the threads.. but since the two objects are in contact with each other, the surfaces in contact should cool at approximately the same rate, making this a bit of a mute point.
Studs can fail for a variety of reasons.
- fatique
- mechanical stresses induced by thermal expansion/contraction
- over tightening or under tightening
- corrosion (requires a long time though.....)
- improper seating of the wheel when lug nuts are initially tightened
- failure to re-torque after an initial install of the wheel each time...
Each of the above is worth a chapter in a book, which I won't write today!
Translated... a few problems autocrossers can have would come from:
- how often you change tires/wheels without changing lugs/studs
- torque wrench out of spec
- putting cold wheels on a very hot car right after an autox and tightening to mfr specs (the studs wiill be forced to stretch some as they cool down)
- adding lubricant to the studs/lugs and still tightening to mfr specs can cause you to overtighten the lugs
I try to let the car cool after my last run some before tightening the lugs down on the street wheels.
It's a good idea to change studs/lug nuts periodically on the car. If you do a lot of track events and or autocross heavily, it's cheap insurance to do it every year. It's easy to take care of in the garage, and a royal pain at an event.
Hope this helps.
Miles