ajchien
Well-known member
Sorry, my camera isn't taking photos well, so I guess I'll try to describe as best as possible.
Should have been a simple morning, rear brake pads on my wife's 03 Honda Element with 210k miles.
Everything is fine until I go and put the wheels back on, one lug nut makes the impact hammer a lot, take it off and I notice the stud has a single thread that is bent over a bit.
So I get my craftsman (Kastar/Lang) 12x1.5 thread restorer tap and die out, all done with oil. The tap went through the lugut a few times and is now smooth. But the restorer tap itself now has one thread that is sheared off.
The die went into the stud and does its thing. After everything spins smoothly with the die i notice the stud thread is bent over into the valley of the thread rather than straightened out
i try to spin on the lug nut anyway - no go. Do the same thing again for no apparent reason, and get no different results.
Well thankfully I have a craftsman 12x1.5 die. The real cutting die type. I spin that onto the stud back and forth twice and it removed the bent thread out of the valley of the lug stud. Everything fine now.
Just kind of annoyed a buggered thread was fixed easier with a cutting tap/die set rather than with a restorer set.
Should have been a simple morning, rear brake pads on my wife's 03 Honda Element with 210k miles.
Everything is fine until I go and put the wheels back on, one lug nut makes the impact hammer a lot, take it off and I notice the stud has a single thread that is bent over a bit.
So I get my craftsman (Kastar/Lang) 12x1.5 thread restorer tap and die out, all done with oil. The tap went through the lugut a few times and is now smooth. But the restorer tap itself now has one thread that is sheared off.
Well thankfully I have a craftsman 12x1.5 die. The real cutting die type. I spin that onto the stud back and forth twice and it removed the bent thread out of the valley of the lug stud. Everything fine now.
Just kind of annoyed a buggered thread was fixed easier with a cutting tap/die set rather than with a restorer set.
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