Jump to content
HybridZ

03 Cobra Wheels Mounted... kinda..


Recommended Posts

I have run aluminum spacers on my daily driver toyota rock crawler since 2000 with 40" tall Super Swampers and have encountered no problems. I have broken ring gears, birfields, and hubs, but have never had an issue with the spacers. You could check the adapter nuts a couple of miles after initial installation and then every tire rotation if you really wanted to. I am running 2" 4 lug to 5 lug adapters on my 280 with Cobra rims (white with zg flares but only a 5.7 not a 6.0 :() and havent had any issues with this car either, but I havent put a lot of miles on the combo yet (street only car).

Tory

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The problem is that you CAN'T check the lugnuts on the adapters without taking the wheels off. If one of the adapters is not 100% perfectly flush (which can easily happen when placing them over wheels hubs, depending on design), it will get bound up when you are torquing it down. Your torque wrench will show everything being fine, and then the first time you hit a bump and it is unbound, it will loosen very slightly. It might be days or weeks until the nuts work themselves off, but you won't have much warning.

 

 

Dont be lazy - just take your wheels off at 25 miles, 50 miles, 100 miles, 500 miles and so on and check for anything wrong. I have seen tons of people run adapters and spacers with no problems. I think the reason of these breaking is more of a user fault issue more than a product issue.

 

I had a wheel fall off my 87 Cherokee because once the aluminum settles on the steel, there will not be the tightness like there was. The wheel eventually worked its way off. Ive found that anything ANYTHING aluminum going on drivetrain where there is a chance of settling, needs to be tightened at least once after 25-50-100 miles.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I promise I wasn't exaggerating anything, and I'm not the only person that has happened to. Do you know why your car caught on fire? Do you have a way to change your behavior so that you can be reasonably sure it won't happen again?

 

The problem is that you CAN'T check the lugnuts on the adapters without taking the wheels off. If one of the adapters is not 100% perfectly flush (which can easily happen when placing them over wheels hubs, depending on design), it will get bound up when you are torquing it down. Your torque wrench will show everything being fine, and then the first time you hit a bump and it is unbound, it will loosen very slightly. It might be days or weeks until the nuts work themselves off, but you won't have much warning.

 

Guys who "drift" while using spacers are probably changing their wheels that day. They (hopefully) check their spacer lugs every time the car goes out on the track. There is a big difference between track cars and daily driven cars as I was very careful to specify earlier.

 

 

you do realize about all spacers are AL, and just like AL wheels... your supposed to retorque them after so many miles to avoid the above stated problems. I'm just sayn'

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...