Wiki User
∙ 15y ago70 ft-lb is common for most all passenger car lug nuts. Always recheck the torque after a few miles, especially with aluminum wheels.
Wiki User
∙ 15y ago100lbs
95 ft lbs
100 Ft. lbs
70 ft-lbs is common for most passenger cars. Always recheck the torque after a few miles, especially with aluminum wheels.
77 lb-ft. Re-torque after 1,000 miles if using aluminum wheels.
Believe it or not, aluminum wheels are wheels made of aluminum
85-105 Ft. lbs.
100ft/lbs 80 ft. pounds for steel wheels and 105 ft. pounds for aluminum wheels
Don't know the factory torque specs offhand, but for that vehicle, I'd recommend you torque them to at least 400 lbs/ft.On steel wheels the lug nuts should be torqued to 80 lb/ft. On aluminum wheels torque them to 85 lb/ft
If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.
For aluminum wheels 75-80 foot lbs....Recheck after a few miles of driving.
80 - 90 lbs on aluminum alloy wheels and 100 lbs on steel. Check torque after driving 30 miles.