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Are locking wheel nuts redundant?


Ekona

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The more I think about it, the more I think they are.

 

They were designed to stop people nicking your very expensive and brand-new alloy wheels, back when everything came on steel ones. These days every single car (give or take) has alloys, so unless you're running really desirable M or AMG wheels I reckon locking nuts are more hassle than they're worth.

 

How many times do we see people on here with stuck nuts, or lost keys? Is the risk of having your standard wheels nicked that high that we need to give ourselves the ballache still?

 

It's always a faff, trying to find the key and then transposing it across to various wheels when changing them, along with the risk of damaging the nuts themselves. I'm kinda thinking that unless you've got £3K worth of wheels on, you're better off running standard nuts all round.

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I take the opinion that if they want your wheels, they'll take your wheels. I'd rather someone stole my wheels and I had to replace them, than someone smashed my window in looking for the locking wheel nut key and then stole my wheels. Not used lockers for years now and never had an issue.

 

I was put off when my mcguard key broke and a guy at my local tyre place got them off with no real issues, or special tools, despite the fact that mcguard nuts are supposed to be some of the best around.

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I think i would risk assess it as to where you live and where you're likely to go - Nissan price for replacement wheels (excluding rubber) for the 370 is £1200 each

^^^ this

.....but unfortunately I think if your car is the target of thieving **** then regardless of how secure it may or may not be it will be taken, I once witnessed a few years ago a brand new evo 10 being loaded onto a flatbed in the middle of the day by official looking individuals in high vis etc. no one suspected anything untoward until later that day the owner of said car came knocking doors asking if anyone saw anything as his shiny new evo had been stolen, I doubt anyone would go to that length just for a set of wheels but criminals are a very determined breed and if they want to take it they most likely will

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i'll be taking the locking wheel nuts off the wheels on the track car and replacing them with standard. considering that we'll be tightening/changing wheels fairly regularly, its just a faff having to keep swapping on a locking wheel key. Nobody is going to want some ancient bmw wheels in need of a refurb anyways.

 

On the zed i'll keep them on - wheels get changed a lot less regularly.

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I have only ever sold one set of locking nuts lol

 

Thats because you can pick them up for a tenner a set on ebay lol. I live in east london, i see cars everyday standing on bricks where local scum has taken the alloys, even if they can get a quick £40 of scrap they will do round here.

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Excellent, I'm glad it's not just me then!

 

I was only thinking about this as I thought I'd lost the key to the MR2 last night when I was packing for Donington this weekend, and in the middle of my panic wondering how I was going to get the wheels off to get the tyres changed that I realised just how utterly pointless is was having them on a track slag.

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Mcguard nuts have a "rotating hardened steel collar" on theirs so the reverse thread sockets and oversized sockets don't work, they just spin the collar....

 

 

 

 

 

Supposedly. I just mashed the top of the locker down to essentially crimp the collar in place.

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Everyone leaves their locking nut key in the car, normally in the dash, centre console or the wheel well with the other tools. It takes half a second to put someones window through and grab from one of those locations. You check your car over and think nothing has gone missing, the thief must have been disturbed. Two weeks later, after you've stopped watching the car like a hawk, you wake up and the car is on bricks.

 

I'd rather they just stole the wheels so I only had to claim on my insurance once.

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Everyone leaves their locking nut key in the car, normally in the dash, centre console or the wheel well with the other tools. It takes half a second to put someones window through and grab from one of those locations. You check your car over and think nothing has gone missing, the thief must have been disturbed. Two weeks later, after you've stopped watching the car like a hawk, you wake up and the car is on bricks.

 

I'd rather they just stole the wheels so I only had to claim on my insurance once.

talking of insurance then - if you remove the locking nuts ????

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Everyone leaves their locking nut key in the car, normally in the dash, centre console or the wheel well with the other tools. It takes half a second to put someones window through and grab from one of those locations. You check your car over and think nothing has gone missing, the thief must have been disturbed. Two weeks later, after you've stopped watching the car like a hawk, you wake up and the car is on bricks.

 

I'd rather they just stole the wheels so I only had to claim on my insurance once.

talking of insurance then - if you remove the locking nuts ????

Ever heard an insurance company ask if you have locking nuts fitted?
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Everyone leaves their locking nut key in the car, normally in the dash, centre console or the wheel well with the other tools. It takes half a second to put someones window through and grab from one of those locations. You check your car over and think nothing has gone missing, the thief must have been disturbed. Two weeks later, after you've stopped watching the car like a hawk, you wake up and the car is on bricks.

 

I'd rather they just stole the wheels so I only had to claim on my insurance once.

talking of insurance then - if you remove the locking nuts ????

 

hmm... they are not standard fit, an optional extra so would they even know if you had them ?

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Everyone leaves their locking nut key in the car, normally in the dash, centre console or the wheel well with the other tools. It takes half a second to put someones window through and grab from one of those locations. You check your car over and think nothing has gone missing, the thief must have been disturbed. Two weeks later, after you've stopped watching the car like a hawk, you wake up and the car is on bricks.

 

I'd rather they just stole the wheels so I only had to claim on my insurance once.

talking of insurance then - if you remove the locking nuts ????

 

Never been asked on any of my policies if I have locking wheel nuts or not. I'd presume they're an extra measure, not a required one.

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I take the opinion that if they want your wheels, they'll take your wheels. I'd rather someone stole my wheels and I had to replace them, than someone smashed my window in looking for the locking wheel nut key and then stole my wheels. Not used lockers for years now and never had an issue.

 

This!

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