Wamsutta
Well-known member
Yes I do. I paint it on the wheel lug studs with an acid brush and work it into the threads. The acid brush is key to getting the correct application.
Nickle based anti-seize works well...Good to 2400F.
Last time I put anti-seize on my lug studs, this is the reaction I got from the tire shop employees.
I also put it there. The very definition of frustration is finally getting all the lug nuts off only to have the tire be stuck. ESPECIALLY on the road.
What these guys said.
If you are rotating your tires in the intervals that you should be, and torquing them to the spec they should be at, they should not be that hard to get off keeping the studs dry.
Wifes Mercedes has wheel bolts with Female threads in the hub. (it's fun getting the wheel on)
I do always use a wire bristle brush in a drill and compressed air to clean out the female ends of the hub, and a wire wheel on the lug bolts.
My question is why? I live in high snow high salt area. Never had an issue with any American, German or Japanese car with lug nuts seizing. As mentioned by others, you will only end up tightening them over the specs.
Just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
True !Unless specified otherwise, torque specifications are based on dry threads.
The corrosion protection (plating-ish coating) on fasteners has improved greatly over what they had even in the 1990s.
I put anti-seize on the vehicles of that era. 2000+ I do not.
..............
Nope, never. The three factory service manuals I own state "clean dry threads" so thats what I do. I figure the people who designed the vehicle are probably the ones to believe.
had a truck mechanic,I thought he was the best.He believed even a dab of grease was better than leaving the threads dry.
I’ve removed tens of thousands lug nuts. Only ones that ever broke were because the last jack wagon who put them on cross threaded them and sent it. Anti seize just makes a gigantic unnecessary mess. No anti seize, hand torqued, no problems.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
If you take your car to a tire store with dry wheel lug studs, there's a good chance they will peel the threads off the studs when they blip it with an impact wrench.

People are worried about anti seize but yet let shops use torque sticks or impacts????