Recommend me some locking wheel nuts...
Discussion
I use the standard Ford ones on my car - think the brand is Mac-something. They were less than a tenner on eBay.
I agree with the others though, if a thief wants your alloys, the best locking nuts can do is slow them down enough not to bother. I'd get some anyway as they are not expensive and without them, anyone with a 19mm socket can help themselves(bear in mind there is one in the boot of almost all cars)
I agree with the others though, if a thief wants your alloys, the best locking nuts can do is slow them down enough not to bother. I'd get some anyway as they are not expensive and without them, anyone with a 19mm socket can help themselves(bear in mind there is one in the boot of almost all cars)
I have McGard Ultras on my car - These are the ones with the spinning shrouds so even if you do hammer a socket over them it'll just spin. If it takes a robbing s
te 60 seconds longer to nick my wheels so if he picks the car with the s
t lockers (or none at all) over yours because of this then they have done their job. Plus hammering a socket on makes a lot of noise and if you have partially recessed bolts it can be impossible, so they will always favour the soft target.
It's a bit like having an alarm on your car or house. If someone desperately wants to rob you, they will, but if you can mitigate the risk (ie: move it to the next car or house) because of these measures then it's £40 well spent (or whatever they cost these days).
te 60 seconds longer to nick my wheels so if he picks the car with the s
t lockers (or none at all) over yours because of this then they have done their job. Plus hammering a socket on makes a lot of noise and if you have partially recessed bolts it can be impossible, so they will always favour the soft target.It's a bit like having an alarm on your car or house. If someone desperately wants to rob you, they will, but if you can mitigate the risk (ie: move it to the next car or house) because of these measures then it's £40 well spent (or whatever they cost these days).
Roop said:
It's a bit like having an alarm on your car or house. If someone desperately wants to rob you, they will, but if you can mitigate the risk (ie: move it to the next car or house) because of these measures
I agree 100% with this.....the lazy thieving
s will always look for the easy target and minimal risk.thinfourth2 said:
Ah locking wheel nuts
Option 1
Carry key in the car
Thief breaks window and nicks wheels
Option 2
Leave key at home
Thief breaks window and doesn't nick the wheels, you get a puncture on the way home and can't get the wheel off and you sit in your cold wet car cursing locking wheel nuts
The man speaks the truth.Option 1
Carry key in the car
Thief breaks window and nicks wheels
Option 2
Leave key at home
Thief breaks window and doesn't nick the wheels, you get a puncture on the way home and can't get the wheel off and you sit in your cold wet car cursing locking wheel nuts
Every car I've had with locking nuts, even brand new cars with OE nuts, I've had to get the nuts removed by force. Even with copper grease on the threads, the key ended up breaking.
First thing I do now is remove the nuts, or specifically ask the dealer to supply the car without the nuts.
Pointless things.
First thing I do now is remove the nuts, or specifically ask the dealer to supply the car without the nuts.
Pointless things.
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