Here I am

2nd Gen Non-Engine/Transmission Brake questions?

Attention: TDR Forum Junkies
To the point: Click this link and check out the Front Page News story(ies) where we are tracking the introduction of the 2025 Ram HD trucks.

Thanks, TDR Staff

Engine/Transmission (1994 - 1998) axle upgrade question...

Status
Not open for further replies.

MFranz

TDR MEMBER
Can anyone tell me the torque for the nuts that hold the rotor to the hub on the front wheels of my 2001 4x4. I know they took a little bit of doing to get them off. Someone suggested taking them off with a wrench and a hammer and to put them back on the same way. Thats what I have been doing ,but I would like to know the torque specs.

Thanks,Mike
 
Need to know torque of nuts that hold rotor and extender onto hub. I have searched everywhere and I'm not coming up with anything . The dodge manual states 95lb for rotor to hub rear bolt. Thats not clear to me,not sure what there talking about. I'm looking at 8 bolts that extend from the hub. This is what the rotor and extender go onto. I need the torque for the 8 nuts that go on to these bolts. Im reading where there is concern for warped rotors if not tightened correctly .
Thanks,Mike
 
Last edited:
Thanks Mike for the reply,I ended up going to 125 ft. Lbs. on the 8 nuts. I talked to a friend of mine that looked up the various torques for different stud sizes and I believe that the studs I'm looking at are 9/16 so I went with that #. As for how important it is to be at an exact torque ,and weather the wrong torque can create warped rotors is still a question for me. I know that when you have a tire changed or tires rotated how exact is that process. I still would like to here from a brake or tire person about what process they do. With so many different vehicles on the road I cannot imagine that the process is that exact.
 
Thanks Mike for the reply,I ended up going to 125 ft. Lbs. on the 8 nuts. I talked to a friend of mine that looked up the various torques for different stud sizes and I believe that the studs I'm looking at are 9/16 so I went with that #. As for how important it is to be at an exact torque ,and weather the wrong torque can create warped rotors is still a question for me. I know that when you have a tire changed or tires rotated how exact is that process. I still would like to here from a brake or tire person about what process they do. With so many different vehicles on the road I cannot imagine that the process is that exact.



With your adapter style set-up the warped rotor thing is not a worry.



It is a worry on any car and some pick-ups with lighter duty rigging.

Any capable tire shop either uses a torque wrench or torque stick when installing wheels to insure proper torque is applied.



I bought a Honda Accord years back and it shuddered like crazy when brakes were applied. I had read about rotors being warped when the wheels were overtightend so I jacked it up, loosened all the wheel nuts and retorqued to specs. Shudder went away. I have been a believer since that day.



Now to create that on my 3/4 ton CTD would be almost impossible, I think that a wheel stud would give up before that rotor would twist.



Mike. :)
 
Thanks Mike,that's what I'm thinking. These rotors are pretty hefty?Now onto my next quest for information.

Thanks

Mike
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top