N.O.S. + Drifting + 2 extra passengers=
The wheel was held on by ONE stud :eek:
Thank God that I had changed my mind about getting on the Freeway just block earlier and decided to drive through the city
We had a big company BBQ that turned into a 'session' (As we like to call it
) I think there were about 3 or 4 cars that had some sort of damage at the end of the day
It then turned into a "EmeraldStuckonthesideoftheroadfor2hoursLessonlearned" session..........It was fun though
Last edited by DriftGirl; Oct 7, 2002 at 11:54 AM.
If just one wheel nut is made "tight" before the others it can cause the wheel to flex (as can one overtightened nut), subsequent tightening of the other nuts then pulls the wheel stud in a sideways direction creating a lateral load on one or more studs, add some spirited driving (or NOS & Drifiting) and TWANG, the studs start popping.
I never allow tyre shops to tighten my wheels unless I stand behind the mech and make sure he does it correctly;
1, all nuts on hand tight and wheel flush to the hub
2, all nuts to half torque settings
3, all nuts to full torque,
Each step should use the 1,3,5,4,2 sequence and check them again after 100miles.
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I know how I wouldve been driving had i got on that freeway...and Im sure I wouldnt be up on CL tonite. 
-Just pulled the car as close as i could to the curb. Had to remove the entire brake caliper & Rotor to hammer out the broken studs.
-Put car in neutral to rotate hub and Hammer them out.
--an auto parts store down the street had 4 Lexus studs in stock.
-Rotate hub to put them in (Small fingers came in handy) and then put the rotor back on with flat bolts to pull the new lugs through the hub.
-put caliper back together (wouldve been nice to change the ebrake pads and the brake pads because they looked like hell
)--wheel back on and straight to a service station to have the lugs pulled through by an air tool.
hammer$19
studs$9.00
lugs$6.00
flat head screw driver$1.00
bolt (to tighten the studs.The lugs are tapered)$.35
Torque bar=Priceless

The whole deal took a few hours its not as hard as it looks. a flat wouldve been worse.
Celebrating Lexus & Toyota from Around the Globe
All is well and i hope nobody ever actually looses a rim while driving.
-Just pulled the car as close as i could to the curb. Had to remove the entire brake caliper & Rotor to hammer out the broken studs.
-Put car in neutral to rotate hub and Hammer them out.
--an auto parts store down the street had 4 Lexus studs in stock.
-Rotate hub to put them in (Small fingers came in handy) and then put the rotor back on with flat bolts to pull the new lugs through the hub.
-put caliper back together (wouldve been nice to change the ebrake pads and the brake pads because they looked like hell
)--wheel back on and straight to a service station to have the lugs pulled through by an air tool.
What more could a guy want? Emerald you are an angel sent from heaven.












