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Hard to find a 18mm strut socket locally

BlitzcrankJapan

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Joined
Dec 9, 2019
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135
Location
Gold Coast, Australia
I've always just tightened them with an impact gun.
The reason this is not recommended is it can cause the piston nut to loosen.

Also if you are an actual idiot you can destroy the seals and bushes if you spin the shaft a lot.

Thirdly it is also very hard to determine the torque you are applying to the top nut.
 
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APEowner

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Oct 2, 2009
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Sunny, New Mexico
The reason this is not recommended is it can cause the piston nut to loosen.

Also if you are an actual idiot you can destroy the seals and bushes if you spin the shaft a lot.

Thirdly it is also very hard to determine the torque you are applying to the top nut.
Sure, you can screw all of that up if you're a ham fisted idiot but the torque isn't that critical and I've done it hundreds of times without issue. That includes removing shocks that I later rebuilt so I'd know if I loosened a piston.
 
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BlitzcrankJapan

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Dec 9, 2019
Messages
135
Location
Gold Coast, Australia
How are you supposed to properly torque strut nuts down with a torque wrench?
A socket like in post #43.
A torque wrench with an open-end wrench end or ring (offset) spanner end.
A torque wrench and normal socket and use a shaft clamp, or as a normal mechanic use a strap wrench to hold the shaft.

There are a heap of ways to do it 'properly'.
Using an impact wrench to tighten the nut to some unknown tightness is definitely not the right way though.
 

dnschmidt

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Joined
Oct 3, 2014
Messages
7,287
Location
Phoenix, AZ
A socket like in post #43.
A torque wrench with an open-end wrench end or ring (offset) spanner end.
A torque wrench and normal socket and use a shaft clamp, or as a normal mechanic use a strap wrench to hold the shaft.

There are a heap of ways to do it 'properly'.
Using an impact wrench to tighten the nut to some unknown tightness is definitely not the right way though.
Except for the fact than 99% of mechanics do it that way without issue thousands of times a day.
 
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