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Thread: Removing stuck wheels

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    bright town VIC
    Posts
    137

    Removing stuck wheels

    Hi all,

    After being quoted $55 ON TOP of the $580 for a 24mth service to rotate the tyres I told the stealer to jam it and decided to do it myself. Should only take 20 minutes, right...

    Lesson #1: the standard Polo jack is a piece of shyte. On level ground in my drive, the car nearly fell off it twice. The one made for my Territory did the job.

    Lesson #2: Removing the rear wheels when they are rusted on is a PITA (especially when combined with a wobbly jack). I have never had this problem with any car in 20 years, but these ones just wouldn't budge. Piece of 4x2, WD40, nothing worked. Wife enquiring every 10 minutes why this is taking so long doesn't help.

    Lesson #3: Logged onto Google and 5 minutes later I was driving back and forwards in my driveway with the wheel nuts half undone. And it did the trick.....sanded down the rust and smeared with grease before I reassembled.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Dont poke and hope, scan, smoke and scope
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    4,423
    Users Country Flag
    Spinning the wheels and hitting with rubber mallet on the inside edge at the same time has never failed me, dont like the idea of vehicle pressed on the floor with its bolts loose , but thats just me
    good to hear you got them off. As for the service dept, you will find they would or should have had the wheels off anyway, they just would have been going back onto a different hub. Although i would recommend a balance be done before hand as you may be bringing a hidden balance problem to the driven wheels.
    Again just my opinion
    Cheers
    Jmac
    Alba European
    Service, Diagnostics and repairs. Mobile Diag available on request
    Audi/VW/Porsche Factory trained tech 25+ yrs exp
    For people who value experience call 0423965341

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Ascot Vale
    Posts
    29
    Quote Originally Posted by kevvie View Post
    Hi all,

    After being quoted $55 ON TOP of the $580 for a 24mth service to rotate the tyres I told the stealer to jam it and decided to do it myself. Should only take 20 minutes, right...

    Lesson #1: the standard Polo jack is a piece of shyte. On level ground in my drive, the car nearly fell off it twice. The one made for my Territory did the job.

    Lesson #2: Removing the rear wheels when they are rusted on is a PITA (especially when combined with a wobbly jack). I have never had this problem with any car in 20 years, but these ones just wouldn't budge. Piece of 4x2, WD40, nothing worked. Wife enquiring every 10 minutes why this is taking so long doesn't help.

    Lesson #3: Logged onto Google and 5 minutes later I was driving back and forwards in my driveway with the wheel nuts half undone. And it did the trick.....sanded down the rust and smeared with grease before I reassembled.

    $55 bucks to rotate and balance the wheels sounds cheap after all that. concidering the damage you would have caused if the car fell off the jack.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    2,756
    Users Country Flag
    Quote Originally Posted by kevvie View Post
    Lesson #1: the standard Polo jack is a piece of shyte. On level ground in my drive, the car nearly fell off it twice. The one made for my Territory did the job.
    This is why you are better off going to Supercheap and buying a cheap trolley jack for about $60. Makes things so much easier.
    "If can't get behind your troops, feel free to stand in front of them..."

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    West Ryde, NSW
    Posts
    389
    Quote Originally Posted by kevvie View Post
    Hi all,

    After being quoted $55 ON TOP of the $580 for a 24mth service to rotate the tyres I told the stealer to jam it and decided to do it myself. Should only take 20 minutes, right...

    Lesson #1: the standard Polo jack is a piece of shyte. On level ground in my drive, the car nearly fell off it twice. The one made for my Territory did the job.

    Lesson #2: Removing the rear wheels when they are rusted on is a PITA (especially when combined with a wobbly jack). I have never had this problem with any car in 20 years, but these ones just wouldn't budge. Piece of 4x2, WD40, nothing worked. Wife enquiring every 10 minutes why this is taking so long doesn't help.

    Lesson #3: Logged onto Google and 5 minutes later I was driving back and forwards in my driveway with the wheel nuts half undone. And it did the trick.....sanded down the rust and smeared with grease before I reassembled.
    Brings back bad memories from when I rotated my wheels as I went through the same issues as you - firstly realising very quickly the polo jack is pathetic and nearly having the car fall off the jack (I did have two others just thought I would give the Polo one a chance!) and then the rear wheels being awfully tough to remove.

    Does anyone have any tips how to prevent the wheels from sticking next time you rotate the wheels? Would sandpaper and grease do the trick?
    NickZ
    Former ride: MY07 Black Polo GTI
    Current: MY09 Blue Passat R36 Wagon

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    1,165


    (it's spinach for those who don't realise)

    where would you sand...? i dont like the sound of that... maybe just grease..
    87' MK2 GTI
    13' MK7 TDI

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    sunshine coast
    Posts
    1,194
    thankfully i went through this when jmac , helped me put on my wheels (found out then that the jack for the polo is a pos ) same thing happened to mine, coroded on. next purchase a half decent trolly jack (thanks again jmac)

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Sydney
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    2,756
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    Quote Originally Posted by jayjay View Post
    where would you sand...? i dont like the sound of that... maybe just grease..
    Just around the inside of the bore of the center of the wheel, and around the center of the hub on the car...This would take any oxidisation off the hubs.
    "If can't get behind your troops, feel free to stand in front of them..."

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    447
    Quote Originally Posted by Jmac View Post
    Spinning the wheels and hitting with rubber mallet on the inside edge at the same time has never failed me, dont like the idea of vehicle pressed on the floor with its bolts loose , but thats just me

    Cheers
    Jmac
    This has also never failed me, used to be a tyre fitter. Also use copperslip instead of grease...
    1993 MK1 CAB ! Work in Progress........

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    450

    yeah had the same problem, when i took it to my own mechanic, first time taking off the rear wheels were just hard. Copper mallet is best, as they are softer than steel. rubber is good too...

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