Centrelocks
Author
Discussion

AMTony

Original Poster:

1,114 posts

190 months

Wednesday 15th June 2022
quotequote all
I was looking at buying a suitable torque wrench to remove wheels and as a result have been investigating which way tighten and untighten the large centre nuts.

I thought that centrelocks all fastened in the way the wheel rotates when travelling forwards. In other words, they can only get tighter when going forwards.

Have looked on my centrelocks and it appears all the wheels are standard clockwise to tighten and anticlockwise to unfasten.

On the Ferrari I am sure that on the kerbside it is anticlockwise to fasten and clockwise to undo.
Offside is clockwise to fasten and anticlockwise to unfasten.

What am i missing?

Mad Scientist

811 posts

102 months

Wednesday 15th June 2022
quotequote all
The locking pin in the middle stops them moving I think.

You are missing a 5 foot long Norbar torque wrench.

Digga

46,271 posts

306 months

Wednesday 15th June 2022
quotequote all
Yes, the splined, sprung center-pin snaps into place to the corresponding female spline of the lock bolt (it’s not a nut).

IIRC there’s some fancy wrench device that enables you to turn the bolt without needing the faff of locking the brakes. PHer 993rsr had one.

Snowy999

527 posts

88 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
Yes it's called the Renntorq Centerlock tool and costs.....£2550 plus VAT I think from 911 Design.

Digga

46,271 posts

306 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
Snowy999 said:
Yes it's called the Renntorq Centerlock tool and costs.....£2550 plus VAT I think from 911 Design.
Thank you, yes that's the badger.



Design 911 said:
A motorsport grade torque multiplier is used to convert 95 lb-ft of manual input torque to 443 lb-ft of output torque.
So you don't need a 7 foot long torque wrench or breaker bar. Clever stuff.


Louis Balfour

28,176 posts

245 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
Snowy999 said:
Yes it's called the Renntorq Centerlock tool and costs.....£2550 plus VAT I think from 911 Design.
I am not sure what is special about this kit. I used to use a 3/4 drive torque wrench and long bar, by Precision Instruments. In fact I sold mine only last month. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Drive-Torque-Wrench-Break...


Digga

46,271 posts

306 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
Louis Balfour said:
Snowy999 said:
Yes it's called the Renntorq Centerlock tool and costs.....£2550 plus VAT I think from 911 Design.
I am not sure what is special about this kit. I used to use a 3/4 drive torque wrench and long bar, by Precision Instruments. In fact I sold mine only last month. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Drive-Torque-Wrench-Break...
The design means you don't need to faff about braking the wheels to take them off. Plus it is a proper torque multiplier, not a lever, so more compact.

As I say, 993rsr has one and is properly chuffed with it. I have zero cars with centrelocks and nothing to do with the product or Design 911, so I am not talking my own book.

Louis Balfour

28,176 posts

245 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
Digga said:
Louis Balfour said:
Snowy999 said:
Yes it's called the Renntorq Centerlock tool and costs.....£2550 plus VAT I think from 911 Design.
I am not sure what is special about this kit. I used to use a 3/4 drive torque wrench and long bar, by Precision Instruments. In fact I sold mine only last month. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Drive-Torque-Wrench-Break...
The design means you don't need to faff about braking the wheels to take them off. Plus it is a proper torque multiplier, not a lever, so more compact.

As I say, 993rsr has one and is properly chuffed with it. I have zero cars with centrelocks and nothing to do with the product or Design 911, so I am not talking my own book.
Ah I see.

I think my PI kit was $375 when I bought it. The method I used for braking the front wheels was to use a breaker bar wedged between the brake pedal and front seat. Not elegant, but effective. I think unless I was swapping CLs weekly I'd probably be fine with that solution!

LennyM1984

1,010 posts

91 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
I am not an expert and do not have centrelooks on any of my cars but that £2.5k tool looks remarkably similar to a normal torque multiplier...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/FIRSTINFO-3-4-Torque-Mult...


Digga

46,271 posts

306 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
LennyM1984 said:
I am not an expert and do not have centrelooks on any of my cars but that £2.5k tool looks remarkably similar to a normal torque multiplier...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/FIRSTINFO-3-4-Torque-Mult...
If you could make it work with a 1/2" to 3/4" adapter (for the Porsche wheel bolt tool) then yes. Big saving.

ttdan

1,111 posts

216 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
One way to hold the brakes on, if you’re doing it solo, is to use a woodworking clamp. Reverse its pads and use it as a spreader between pedal and seat base. It locks in place while you tighten/untighten.

irwin clamp thing


AMTony

Original Poster:

1,114 posts

190 months

Thursday 16th June 2022
quotequote all
I used to use a 3/4 drive torque wrench and long bar, by Precision Instruments. In fact I sold mine only last month. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Drive-Torque-Wrench-Break...


[/quote]

This is the one I have seen.
They all seem to be out of stock though.
Have a notice with PI to let me know when back in stock.
I want one for emergency use only so don’t really fancy paying £2.5k.
If anyone selling a PI one can you let me know?

c4sman

818 posts

177 months

Saturday 18th June 2022
quotequote all
£2.5k is way too much in my view just to avoid pressing the brake pedal when changing the front wheel ( handbrake does the job for the rear). Plus that pic is wrong as the car must be off the ground when removing or fitting the wheel. This whole setup cost me £400 https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

AMTony

Original Poster:

1,114 posts

190 months

Saturday 18th June 2022
quotequote all
c4sman said:
£2.5k is way too much in my view just to avoid pressing the brake pedal when changing the front wheel ( handbrake does the job for the rear). Plus that pic is wrong as the car must be off the ground when removing or fitting the wheel. This whole setup cost me £400 https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...
This is what i want but everywhere says out of stock?
Where did you get yours from?

Thx Tony

c4sman

818 posts

177 months

Saturday 18th June 2022
quotequote all
AMTony said:
This is what i want but everywhere says out of stock?
Where did you get yours from?

Thx Tony
Bought mine new on eBay a few years ago from a US supplier, so waited a few weeks for it to arrive. US only product. I just did a search on eBay and found 2 or 3 that seem to be offering them in the at the moment. If you read through the thread I posted above there are some tips and tricks on getting the ideal set up with model numbers.

LennyM1984

1,010 posts

91 months

Saturday 18th June 2022
quotequote all
Just as another option (and I don't know the specifics of centrelocks so maybe it won't work) but I have a DeWalt impact gun that can deliver 950nm of "undoing" torque. Surely with the right bit, this would undo any centrelock?

I can't remember exactly how much it cost me but with a 5ah battery and a charger it was less than £200. You'd need a 3/4 adapter but they are pretty cheap.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00VXN7TUW?ref_=pe_270...

c4sman

818 posts

177 months

Saturday 18th June 2022
quotequote all
LennyM1984 said:
Just as another option (and I don't know the specifics of centrelocks so maybe it won't work) but I have a DeWalt impact gun that can deliver 950nm of "undoing" torque. Surely with the right bit, this would undo any centrelock?

I can't remember exactly how much it cost me but with a 5ah battery and a charger it was less than £200. You'd need a 3/4 adapter but they are pretty cheap.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00VXN7TUW?ref_=pe_270...
Unfortunately impact gun + Centrelock = big replacement / repair bills IMHO

Illya Kuryakin

71 posts

58 months

Sunday 19th June 2022
quotequote all
c4sman said:
£2.5k is way too much in my view just to avoid pressing the brake pedal when changing the front wheel ( handbrake does the job for the rear). Plus that pic is wrong as the car must be off the ground when removing or fitting the wheel. This whole setup cost me £400 https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...
Agreed. I get the convenience of the torque converter but 2.5K!!! Breaker bar, Norbar Break-back torque wrench and get the missus to fettle the brake pedal. 20 minutes tops to remove/fit all 4 wheels.

Illya Kuryakin

71 posts

58 months

Sunday 19th June 2022
quotequote all
AMTony said:
I was looking at buying a suitable torque wrench to remove wheels and as a result have been investigating which way tighten and untighten the large centre nuts.

I thought that centrelocks all fastened in the way the wheel rotates when travelling forwards. In other words, they can only get tighter when going forwards.

Have looked on my centrelocks and it appears all the wheels are standard clockwise to tighten and anticlockwise to unfasten.

On the Ferrari I am sure that on the kerbside it is anticlockwise to fasten and clockwise to undo.
Offside is clockwise to fasten and anticlockwise to unfasten.

What am i missing?
A couple of tips if you decide on the Breaker Bar, Norbar break-back torque wrench solution:

If you are removing the wheels solo then make sure you have the ignition on to enable the brake servo and use a wood clamp with the jaws reversed to secure the brake pedal against the drivers seat base. Screwfix sell Irwin clamps, soft jaws with a quality trigger ratchet.

Front wheels have a tendency to move along the plane of the steering rack when torquing/undoing so be wary of the breaker bar/ torque wrench getting near your beloved bodywork.





Louis Balfour

28,176 posts

245 months

Sunday 19th June 2022
quotequote all
Illya Kuryakin said:
AMTony said:
I was looking at buying a suitable torque wrench to remove wheels and as a result have been investigating which way tighten and untighten the large centre nuts.

I thought that centrelocks all fastened in the way the wheel rotates when travelling forwards. In other words, they can only get tighter when going forwards.

Have looked on my centrelocks and it appears all the wheels are standard clockwise to tighten and anticlockwise to unfasten.

On the Ferrari I am sure that on the kerbside it is anticlockwise to fasten and clockwise to undo.
Offside is clockwise to fasten and anticlockwise to unfasten.

What am i missing?
A couple of tips if you decide on the Breaker Bar, Norbar break-back torque wrench solution:

If you are removing the wheels solo then make sure you have the ignition on to enable the brake servo and use a wood clamp with the jaws reversed to secure the brake pedal against the drivers seat base. Screwfix sell Irwin clamps, soft jaws with a quality trigger ratchet.

Front wheels have a tendency to move along the plane of the steering rack when torquing/undoing so be wary of the breaker bar/ torque wrench getting near your beloved bodywork.

IIRC I used to use the breaker bar wedged between the brake pedal and driver's seat (with a cloth of course). No need for a special clamp.