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Lug Nuts
On Sunday I got a flat tire. My car has a full-size spare, which I was quite glad for on this, my first flat tire in 7 years with the Golf.
But Golfy’s tire wrench isn’t one of those huge plus-sign-shaped ones that’s 18 inches long on both bars. Instead it’s shaped like an allen wrench, and is only about 10 inches long. I never thought this would have been a problem until I had to use it to loosen the lug nuts.
It was virtually impossible to get them loose. Of course they’re tightened with pneumatic drills at the garage that installs them, and they also appeared to have a slight amount of rust on them. I pulled with all my might and they didn’t budge even slightly. Kim and I both tried standing on the wrench, to no avail.
I started thinking about opening my phone and getting our GPS coordinates, and calling my parents or one of my siblings, asking them to bring us some stronger arms and/or a different tire wrench, when I had one last idea. I stood on the wrench again, then jumped up off it, and slammed my heel back down on it. Finally the nut gave way!
The interesting thing is that it made a terrible screeching noise when it first loosened, and upon tightening the nuts they made the same noise at the very end of the tightening process. I’ve heard the noise before, of course, at any number of auto repair shops throughout my life, but I always figured it was the sound of the drill hitting its past-my-current-torque-setting level of tightness.
So why and how do the lug nuts make that noise?
(OK, technically, they are lug bolts on my car, but I’ve never actually heard anyone call them anything but "lug nuts.")
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