Extremely Hot Wheel Lug Nuts

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by thebigguy, Sep 10, 2010.

  1. thebigguy

    thebigguy Guest

    My driver side wheel lugs get extremely hot after a short amount of
    driving. THe passenger side is not nearly as hot. Had the caliper
    checked and all was good. Could it be the caliper pins needing
    cleaning and relube. These are aftermarket pads and rotors, but if
    that was the problem, woulldn't both sides get extremely hot? Had new
    rotors put on cuz the excess heat warped the rotors.
     
    thebigguy, Sep 10, 2010
    #1
  2. thebigguy

    Tegger Guest



    How was that determined?


    The pads AND the pins ALL need to be floating freely. If the pads are
    incorrectly-sized and are tight on their bracket, you can get symptoms
    similar to a sticking caliper.

    If all is indeed free, then the piston has rust spots and is sticking in
    its bore.
     
    Tegger, Sep 10, 2010
    #2
  3. thebigguy

    News Guest

    Have you considered fitting JDM nut coolers?
     
    News, Sep 10, 2010
    #3
  4. thebigguy

    News Guest


    Have you considered JDM nut coolers?
     
    News, Sep 10, 2010
    #4
  5. thebigguy

    Clete Guest

    Good one
     
    Clete, Sep 10, 2010
    #5
  6. thebigguy

    thebigguy Guest

    Will check the pad and pin mobility. Thanks! If the pads are tight,
    can the end be ground down slightly for a better fit...of course how
    much is too much?
     
    thebigguy, Sep 10, 2010
    #6
  7. thebigguy

    jim beam Guest

    something was wrong with that diagnosis. brakes turn speed into heat.
    if one is hot and the other not, either one brake is stuck on, or the
    other is stuck off. either way, you need to get this sorted out with
    proper caliper maintenance. you can buy genuine honda seal rubbers for
    ~$30 for a set and rebuild the calipers yourself if you know what you're
    doing. for this age vehicle, it's a great safety investment and should
    be considered anyway. dig about on tegger.com for how-to's.

    dude, you really need to find a competent mechanic that knows what
    they're doing. there's no way they should have wasted your money on new
    rotors if they didn't fix the cause in the first place.

    have you considered doing a basic mechanics course at your local
    community college? if you run a clunker, it's a great investment in not
    getting ripped off by incompetent "economy" mechanics. you don't have
    to do the whole car - just basic maintenance or brake technician should
    do it.
     
    jim beam, Sep 10, 2010
    #7
  8. thebigguy

    jim beam Guest

    do not even think about doing this. if the pads don't fit, they're
    either cheapo aftermarket crap, or you have rust that needs to be
    cleaned off properly when you service the calipers.

    the best pads for an accord [for all but extreme use] are genuine honda
    pads. and at only $43 online, the same price as most aftermarket crap,
    you're not saving any money by not using them. they even come with the
    correct shims and correct grease too!
     
    jim beam, Sep 10, 2010
    #8
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