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Butch Davis June 10th 06 11:52 PM

Trailer Maint Issue
 
Thursday out fishing one of my friends told a story of replaceing dry rotted
boat trailer tires with new. Problem encountered was lug nuts frozen to
studs. Long story short, he had them cut off with a torch and replaced
along with lug nuts. Used all SS replacements.

He suggested we all check ours just in case. Checked mine yesterday.
Backed off each nut in turn, applied OMC Triple Guard to the stud and
retightened. One lug nut required a lot of work to remove necesitating a
lot of 1/8th turns back and forth with added lube until I finally worked it
off. Of course the lug and nut were stripped.

Lucky me I have disc brakes so lined up the offending stud with a roomy
space and banged it out using a drift pin. I'll get a replacement Monday.

Moral of story is to check/lube your boat trailer lugs every year. Don't
even have to jack it up if you do one lug at a time. A good anti-seize will
probably work as well as or better than the Triple Guard I use.

Butch



JimH June 11th 06 12:11 AM

Trailer Maint Issue
 

"Butch Davis" wrote in message
nk.net...
Thursday out fishing one of my friends told a story of replaceing dry
rotted boat trailer tires with new. Problem encountered was lug nuts
frozen to studs. Long story short, he had them cut off with a torch and
replaced along with lug nuts. Used all SS replacements.

He suggested we all check ours just in case. Checked mine yesterday.
Backed off each nut in turn, applied OMC Triple Guard to the stud and
retightened. One lug nut required a lot of work to remove necesitating a
lot of 1/8th turns back and forth with added lube until I finally worked
it off. Of course the lug and nut were stripped.

Lucky me I have disc brakes so lined up the offending stud with a roomy
space and banged it out using a drift pin. I'll get a replacement Monday.

Moral of story is to check/lube your boat trailer lugs every year. Don't
even have to jack it up if you do one lug at a time. A good anti-seize
will probably work as well as or better than the Triple Guard I use.

Butch


Good advice! Thanks for the heads up. ;-)



JohnH June 11th 06 02:12 AM

Trailer Maint Issue
 
On Sat, 10 Jun 2006 22:52:55 GMT, "Butch Davis"
wrote:

Thursday out fishing one of my friends told a story of replaceing dry rotted
boat trailer tires with new. Problem encountered was lug nuts frozen to
studs. Long story short, he had them cut off with a torch and replaced
along with lug nuts. Used all SS replacements.

He suggested we all check ours just in case. Checked mine yesterday.
Backed off each nut in turn, applied OMC Triple Guard to the stud and
retightened. One lug nut required a lot of work to remove necesitating a
lot of 1/8th turns back and forth with added lube until I finally worked it
off. Of course the lug and nut were stripped.

Lucky me I have disc brakes so lined up the offending stud with a roomy
space and banged it out using a drift pin. I'll get a replacement Monday.

Moral of story is to check/lube your boat trailer lugs every year. Don't
even have to jack it up if you do one lug at a time. A good anti-seize will
probably work as well as or better than the Triple Guard I use.

Butch


Thanks Butch. Appreciate the info.


basskisser June 13th 06 09:28 PM

Trailer Maint Issue
 

Butch Davis wrote:
Thursday out fishing one of my friends told a story of replaceing dry rotted
boat trailer tires with new. Problem encountered was lug nuts frozen to
studs. Long story short, he had them cut off with a torch and replaced
along with lug nuts. Used all SS replacements.

He suggested we all check ours just in case. Checked mine yesterday.
Backed off each nut in turn, applied OMC Triple Guard to the stud and
retightened. One lug nut required a lot of work to remove necesitating a
lot of 1/8th turns back and forth with added lube until I finally worked it
off. Of course the lug and nut were stripped.

Lucky me I have disc brakes so lined up the offending stud with a roomy
space and banged it out using a drift pin. I'll get a replacement Monday.

Moral of story is to check/lube your boat trailer lugs every year. Don't
even have to jack it up if you do one lug at a time. A good anti-seize will
probably work as well as or better than the Triple Guard I use.

Butch


You can use anti-sieze but you should never use a lubricant on lugs.
You're just asking for trouble, because a lot of the holding power
comes from the threads "holding on" to each other, like a slip critical
connection.



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