Cleaning Inside Tires

reparebrise said:
When putting them back on remember to use a torque wrench set to the manufacturers specs, or else you could find yourself with a very unhappy customer. Over torquing can lead to a warped wheel, or brake rotor, or worse a customer stuck on the side of the road with a flat and a broken lug wrench, because the lug nuts are over tightened. We also drive the car a few blocks and re-torque after the drive to make sure all is well.






At least someone knows how to tighten wheels around here... :xyxthumbs



When i was taking my wheels off for the first time, I broke a lug nut, and lug nut stud because they (dealership) tightend them too much... and of course the other lug nuts were only put on with 40 pounds or less on others.. :down
 
IME you simply *have* to remove the wheels for a good initial cleanup. I'd sure use a plastic-coated socket to avoid an "oops" on the wheels' finish, and yeah, I'd think a torque wrench is mandatory for remounting them.



[Off-topic: the dealers I patronize use torque *sticks* and they are *NOT* accurate. I make sure I send my own sockets for them to use and I either send along my spare torque wrench or I insist that they dig out their torque wrenches when the work on my vehicles. For that matter, I keep a plastic-coazted socket in the glovebox of some vehicles just so it's always handy, even for changing a flat.]



I didn't have much luck with my steamer (Daimer 1500C) when I tried it on a set of wheels a while back. I had high hopes considering how well it cleane my RX-7s never-cleaned calipers (20-some years of mess) but it just didn't do the job on the wheels the way I'd expected :nixweiss



I do best with a potent wheel cleaner, then clay and a solvent (the order depends on the wheels in question), then a polish/compound and/or a paintcleaner, then an AIO product, then the LSP.



Once you get 'em clean, yeah...layer on a sealant. FK1000P works great for this in part because of how it can be layered without a long wait between coats (ZFXed Zaino might work the same).



Then for washes, I clean the back sides by reaching through with small mitts and/or large swabs ("foam on a stick"). I find those methods work a lot better *for me* than the EZ Detail brush. The small mitts allow me to clean the back sides of the spokes quite well on 5-6 spoke wheels.



For BBS-style wheels I don't see anything other than the Power-Stick really doing the job :think:



reparebrise- Actually the wheel you posted doesn't look that bad for 30K! The uncleaned areas aren't nearly as bad as I've seen on wheels with far fewer miles.
 
btw, while on the topic of wheels / and or removing wheels, I have a set of sockets where the exterior was metal but the Interior is made out of fiberglass. Really $$$$$$ at the time and the company went out of business. If I recall, Matco or Mac absorbed them at one point, but the product line went away.



These fiberglass sockets are the only things that touch my wheels....then again, on the winter wheels/winter lugs, I'll take a regular socket to them with no hesitation.
 
i might just have to pony up the dough and buy one of those powersticks. so far i havent heard of them deteriorating after many uses, and it seems like the next best alternative to removing the wheels.
 
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