The Best of Car Talk - #2452: Go Ahead, Touch 'em!
Episode Date: June 29, 2024Spencer from Florida was riding down the highway in his Honda without a care in the world when he was hit with an urgent need to touch his lug nuts. How normal is that? Find out on this episode of the... Best of Car Talk.Get access to hundreds of episodes in the Car Talk archive when you sign up for Car Talk+ at plus.npr.org/cartalkLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Listen to updated and new episodes wherever you get your podcasts. Hello and welcome to Car Talk on National Public Radio with us, Click and Clack with
Tappert Brothers, and we're broadcasting this week from the Trade Sanctions Division here
at Carretock Plaza.
Now we've decided as a way to make up for upcoming CPB cuts
to impose 100% tariff on all incoming phone calls
to Carretock Plaza.
So when you call the 800 number from now on,
be prepared to pay double.
Did Dougie think of this?
Yeah.
Bad idea, huh?
Math skills.
This is...
Dougie. Come on. Double of nothing is what. You're gonna go triple if you're gonna get anything.
What were you thinking? I can tell you are chomping at the bit. I am chomping because I have got stuff.
In response to my letter in which I pointed out Andy Reichman's great letter. Should I read that one sentence again? Oh, by all means.
Remember, Andy Reichman wrote the letter
in which he thanked us for solving
the great philosophical issue of all time, which was?
The riddle, actually.
The riddle, yeah.
I mean, this is-
Conundrum.
Fermat's theorem was nothing compared to this.
The question was- Squat compared to this.
Squat, right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The question was, is it possible for two people to know less than one person?
And he wrote a magnificent letter proving that we proved that yes, it is true.
And one of the sentences, with two people, he says, and this was the sentence that did
me in, with two people, the intricacies, the gives and takes, the wherefores and why nots can become a veritable
pas de deux of breathtaking speculation interwoven in such a way that apologies or gestures of doubt
are rendered unnecessary. And in response to that we got some pretty good stuff here. I'll read this one. This is quicker. This came from Skip
Cerber from what? Poulsbo, Washington. It's good that you've read these letters in advance.
You can just jump right on this stuff. He sent me something which he received through email
which is something about the Darwin Awards. I didn't know that there was such a thing.
The Darwin Awards, it says, you all know about the Darwin Awards.
We didn't.
It's an annual honor given to the person who did the gene pool, the greatest service,
by killing himself or herself in the most extraordinarily stupid way.
Aha.
Therefore, you know, cutting off the species.
Yes, of course.
And then it explains who this year's nominee isn't it?
I thought actually last year's nominee was much more interesting
But this year's this year's winner was the Arizona Highway Patrol came upon a pile of smoldering metal in the short long and the short
Of it is they thought it was an airplane crash and turned out to be a car
somebody had attached a jato unit jet jet assisted takeoff unit, to his car.
And they figured he was doing between 250 and 300 miles an hour when he came to the
curve and that was it.
But, alright, that's good.
But the last year's winner was even better.
Last year's winner was the fellow who was killed by a coke machine which toppled over
on top of him as he was attempting to tip a
free soda out of it. That was Uncle Vincent wasn't it? In fact there was a similar one, it's a sad thing actually, but there was an article in the paper about a year ago in the Boston newspaper about some guy, some guy who worked for us one of the great
bureaucracies like like the like the transportation authority of the state of some such thing
and he was killed because
he had a job in which he didn't have much to do
and he was setting up a hammock
so that he could take a little nap
and he hooked it up to a giant piece of machinery
got on the hammock and the machine fell on top of them and killed them
that's pretty sad
yeah, there's some kind of justice in that. There certainly is. I like it. It's the Darwin Award. I can think of a million of them. Well,
not a patch to Andy's letter, but... Not a patch, but at least Andy's letter inspired some
interesting stuff. 1-800-332-9287. Don't forget, if you dial this number, it's gonna cost you double.
If you'd like us to inspire you with some
Interesting stuff maybe hello. You're on car talk. Hi guys. Howdy. Who's this? My name is Alexandria Heather
I'm coming from King, New Hampshire. Now. It's in first names. Oh, yeah
Alexandria Heather knows Heather your last name or is it part of your first name? Heather is my last name
Oh, okay. Just you know from where?
King, New Hampshire King, New Hampshire. Okay, you're from where? Keen, New Hampshire
Keen, New Hampshire. Yes, that's pretty keen. Oh
I'm sure that's the first time she's ever heard that. Yeah, she would have been disappointed had I not said it
That's sophomore though. It may be
People count on me for that stuff and they get it every week. So Alexandria, what's what's up well I have a question about our for it's 1987 Ford
escort wagon my boyfriend got it free
from his grandparents it was a gift to
him and we've had to think a lot of
money into it in the last year
interesting and so he really wants to
get a Subaru and we've come across this
really strange sound in the front part of the car.
Oh, of the escort.
Of the escort, right.
And I think it's the right-hand wheel. It sounds like a spray paint can when you shake it.
You know, like a...
Look, look, look, look, look, look, look, look.
Oh, the little ball.
The little ball that bounces around inside.
Right.
Right. And it stops at about 30 or 40 miles an hour.
But we didn't know if that would mean
that we have to put more money into it.
Maybe we should just get a different car
and we're not really sure what's wrong with it.
Well, I think you should probably get a different car,
but there's nothing to do with the noise.
No, I think the noise,
gee, you're gonna be disappointed
because you're gonna have to keep this car
when I tell you how to get rid of the noise.
Hmm.
I think the noise is a pebble inside the wheel cover.
What?
What?
Oh, really?
There isn't much from a mechanical standpoint that would make that kind of noise.
So that it's like a tinkle-tinkle noise. No, it's a-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-gah-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g- Yeah, I mean, so it isn't something mechanical.
And I told you we should have used a masking tape.
I wondered what that was for.
But why doesn't it stop after such a slow speed?
I mean, if it's like a little pebble, it would be going at higher speeds.
Well, I'm sure my brother has a theory on this, and I can help him if he doesn't.
No, when you get going fast enough, centrifugal force will pin the pebble. Exactly. Please don't play that, this is a schoolyard game.
You would pin the pebble to the whatever it's up against and would keep it from making the
noise again. Sure, because what makes the noise is that... It's like being on a merry-go-round.
No, not a merry-go-round, that thing. The Turkish twist. The Turkish twist. Right. The bar for
Rama. Because what's making the noise is as you go slowly, the little pebble is being thrown outward by centrifugal force, and then it drops down by force of gravity.
And you hear it going bloop, bloop, bloop as it goes around and around, being thrown toward the front of the wheel and then dropping down by gravity.
But when you go 60 miles an hour, the centrifugal force overcomes the force of the wheel and then dropping down by gravity but when you go sixty miles an hour the centrifugal force overcomes the force of gravity
how's this?
oh I wasn't listening I'm sorry I was contemplating the thumbnail on my big mic
no I was bailing you out on the centrifugal force theory
oh I'm sorry
because it overcomes the force of gravity and gravity is not sufficient to pull it down
Because centrifugal force is pushing it fall. Yeah. Yeah what he said
Little plastic hubcap. Yeah a little pebble will pop out. I don't even see it
Uh-huh. That's very good!
You may not even see it, right.
In which case we would be proven right.
Again.
Uh-huh.
No, I guarantee you that that's it.
You guarantee me that?
I guarantee it.
Yeah.
This is 100% guarantee also.
You have the car close by right now?
Where's the car?
The car is somewhere else.
Somewhere else.
Not in my apartment.
At your boyfriend's house?
No.
Call him up.
Call him up.
Tell him to run out there.
Take off that wheel cover.
And if a little pebble falls out, call us back.
Now, you think it's the right front wheel, but of course it could be any of the other
wheels.
Right.
So if you don't find it in the right front wheel, look on the car next to it.
Maybe on the right front wheel of that car.
No, seriously. All right. If he's around, ask him to go take off the
wheel cover because we'd love to know. Call us back. We're dying to know if we're right.
Yeah. We're dying to know any time we're right. Thank you, Alexandria Heather from
New Hampshire. It's a pleasure talking to you. Thank you very much. See you. Bye-bye.
We'll be right back after these very important messages.
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Take NPR's Body Electric Challenge. Listen to the series wherever you get your podcasts.
For a while now, you've probably been hearing about book bands, how they're gaining momentum
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On the Code Switch podcast, we're taking a look at why.
Why are so many books suddenly considered so dangerous to kids?
Listen to our new series on the Code Switch podcast from MBR.
Was it just me or did brands seem a little quieter for Pride last
month than they usually are?
Actually, brands generally aren't jumping at the chance to advertise to marginalized
communities or weigh in on politics like they used to.
This week, we look at why brands got woke, then unwoke.
Why was that so unusual?
And what could it say about you?
Listen on It's Been A minute from NPR. true? Yeah. It is? Yeah. Gee, I had all these clever hints. You did? Yeah. Well, that's
too bad, isn't it? I guess I preempted you, didn't I? You want to ask me anyway? No, we'll
try you next week. Well, anyway, it's obvious that the puzzler is on vacation, and in the
meantime, while you're pining over the loss of the puzzler for the summer.
Yeah, I'm sure everybody is.
Gee, I wish you could come up with a couple of stupid deceptive puzzlers like you always
do.
Well, if you have a puzzler that meets our high standards, or meets any standards for
that matter, and you want to send it to us for consideration, send it to Puzzler Tower,
Car Talk Plaza, box 3500 Harvard
Square Cambridge our fair city Massachusetts 02238 potential puzzler
department yeah rear the building and if we should use the person's puzzle or
what about it well you do right anyway no if we can't if you use your puzzler
and we and if we use your puzzler and you catch us at it
we'll send you one of those crummy travel mugs or some other invaluable
uh... valuable
uh... car talk
prize anyway if you would like to ask us a question you can call us at one
eight hundred three three two nine two eight seven hello you're on car talk
hi this is christy from albuquerque christy what's up
well i have a car that uh... has a little thing fun
uh... it's a hippie hippie shake
here is a car
thank you have a
what it does is um... if you're not pushing on the accelerator
it just shakes a bunch of the keys rattling the ignition
and then when you come to stoplight if you put neutral
it's close to shake down but it still shakes
so what we did with a ticket to a car shop
and they said that are they were picked a computer chip
that makes it the oxygen and fuel county and my i'll cut cars this
how do you know
at the chevy cavalier
nineteen ninety
it's got a little bit over a hundred thousand on it
and uh... what happened with his when they did that it helped with the shaking
some
but still i'd put the stoplight i'd still have to drop it neutral
because the key to take the check not much
but what would be interesting whether after on they had done that
if you're pointed down hill with the car
it and i was going to be interesting i can tell already tries to watch
it had to cut out
now and it never used to do that before
and i think uphill it doesn't I
Have yeah, it doesn't because I'm always pushing on the accelerator uphill or I'd go backwards
So you really haven't solved this problem originally you originally went in
Because you had this problem with it shaking and installing the traffic lights
Well, it never tried to stall it just shook the bad that it just shown your teeth rattled
Okay, and then they went ahead and they changed the PROM in the computer, which is the chip.
And that chip tells the computer certain things about your car. It tells it that it's a 90
cavalier, it tells it it's a four cylinder, it tells it you have an automatic transmission,
etc. etc. And that's how the computer assimilates all the information it gets from the various sensors to send the right amount
of fuel to the injectors or from the injectors
into the engine and to have the right spark advance,
et cetera, et cetera.
Oh, okay.
So they may have done the right thing
and they probably determined that by scanning the computer.
They put a scanner on it.
Okay, and they did check the vacuum hoses and they checked the EGR valve.
Good, good. Well, I think they were on the right track checking the vacuum hoses and
the EGR valve because I think what's making it run rough is that you have a vacuum leak
somewhere.
I do, then.
I believe so.
Well, I mean, it sounds to me like they really, despite the fact that it sounds very technical
and high-tech here, they didn't do diddly by replacing this chip.
Okay.
Because it sounds to me that it's doing almost exactly what it was doing when you brought
it in.
Well, the jumping's a little better.
It really is.
It's like at half of the rate that it used to jump.
So the keys don't jingle twice as much as they used to?
That's right, my teeth aren't rattling as much.
Well, they probably figured out how to turn up your idle,
and maybe that's how they've diminished it.
But I would have to guess, as is often the case,
when a car comes into a shop with a problem of any kind,
if that car has a computer and fuel injection,
the mechanics almost always assume the worst, that it has a computer and fuel injection, the mechanics almost always assume
the worst that it has a problem with the computer or one of the computer controls and they go
and they take the scanner out first. And in nine cases out of ten, what's wrong with most
cars is something pretty basic. A bad spark plug wire, a cylinder that has low compression,
a cracked vacuum hose, a leaking intake manifold gasket.
In your case, it could be any one or some combination of these things.
And modern day, modern train mechanics mostly don't even look for these things.
But all those things are the same as they always were.
But they got the computer to blame now.
I would go back to these guys and suggest to them, or maybe go someplace else and suggest
that maybe they ought to look at some more basic stuff.
I would hope that these guys had done a compression test
and a vacuum test and checked the obvious things
before they went ahead and put a prom in.
It may be that you needed an upgraded prom
for this car anyway.
And maybe that wasn't a bad thing that they did,
but I think they're overlooking
a very simple, basic problem.
When they find it, They're gonna say oh
How did we miss that in addition to which?
They should have noticed that what they did didn't really fix the problem
I mean, what does it take to realize that the car is shaking like crazy?
Do they think that all cars made by General Motors shake at idle no and these four cylinders don't shake much at all those six
So I'm just a shake well. I wondering. I figured at 100,000 miles I'd be lucky the wheels didn't fall off, you know?
You may need a valve job. You may well need a valve job. That would do it.
Okay. So tell them to check the basics. Now tell me, what's the expected life on this poor little
thing? What time is it now? Well, it's T minus one and counting to December. That's when
I graduate. I've got to have this little car. Oh, you'll make it to December. Okay.
You're not planning any long trips this summer, are you? No, I hope not. Stay close to home.
Stay in Albuquerque. Oh, okay. And keep AAA, is that it? Yes. And AAA, yeah. See you,
Kristy. Thanks so much alrighty bye bye
1-800-332-9287 hello you're on car talk this is Greg from Winchester
Massachusetts no last names please I'm not well known Winchester yes I know the
town well well I well I know the town I should say what's up Greg well I have a
1987 Toyota Celica GT and it's got about a hundred and ten thousand miles on it i guess i should say what's up great well i have a uh... nineteen eighty seven toyota silica gt
and uh... it's got about a hundred and ten thousand miles on right now
and about fifteen thousand miles ago i had the engine rebuilt
uh... tragically yes you know what what what
uh... precipitated that's well at the time i was having some overheating
problems uh... and uh... ended up uh...
blowing the block in somehow i'm not really sure what happened
but i ended up blowing enormous clouds of white smoke for a while and ending up
with uh... maynard in my crankcase now yeah i was there
but now it was rebuilt
entire engine was rebuilt adjust the top and
no the whole engine
uh... but now what the problem is now that i have a mysterious overheating
problem
and only happening under fairly extreme conditions
uh...
baby when i have the car running up around
or when i'm running around sixty miles an hour with the a c i have no problem
uh... but on very hot days you know eighty five ninety degrees or better
and at fairly high running
uh... speed seventy seventy five miles now of course on a closed track
uh...
yeah yeah with a professional
of course yeah
uh... the needle starts to wander up toward the red zone
uh... doesn't always hit the red zone but it'll go up there you know around
seven-eighths or so on on the on the scale of a back down to sixty miles an
hour even on these hot days
it pretty much stays around the middle
and uh... it overheated once under these conditions and sometimes i had to put
the heat on a little bit uh... comment down
uh... i just don't know what's going on a replace the radiator cap ever placed a
thermostat with a hundred eighty degree
what uh... i think the only other symptom i have a i get some painting
occasionally when it's in that range
well the pain is be a problem getting the pain because it's overheating
okay
maybe but what what what did all work, did anyone take the radiator out?
No, I don't think so.
I mean, it's still the original Toyota radiator.
Oh, then that's absolutely it.
Yeah, I mean, when you have a problem like that at very high speed, I mean, there are
only a couple of things that can cause the heating system to not do its job.
One is you don't have enough airflow, and one is you don't have enough water flow.
All the engine was rebuilt improperly and it's too tight in which case it's gonna melt but it's
covered by warranty. What you need to do is have the radiator taken out. I'm amazed that these
guys didn't do this when they rebuilt the engine but take the radiator out and send it to a shop
and have it flow tested. Flow tested? Yeah. That can't be done while it's in the car so you know that you certainly have enough air
flow if you're doing 80 miles an hour yeah right so you don't have to worry
that the fans are not doing their job right but there is some question of
whether you have sufficient water flow and that's the radiator so there could
be like blockage or something they could jack like blockage or something
especially if it's got 110 hundred and ten k on it
all you know it's it's it's the original reading said
i'm pretty sure yeah
did you ever go on this uh... close track at seventy five or eighty miles an
hour prior to having the engine rebuilt absolutely i've never had a problem
with the right about a third of the time you never had a problem and this
happened immediately after you had rebuilt well yeah i mean it was only as
i say it only happened on the very hot day
So I can't say whether it was immediate or not well
I mean did you ever drive it on this closed track on a very hot day before?
Before it before I had my problems yeah before it was rebuilt yes
And it did not it stayed at one-third never had a problem with it well the radiator was younger than two the way
It was yeah, but it might not have been much been much younger might have been only a few days young
model and on this was a no was a year younger
may have been on ice test track right great yet that's right was a year younger
fifteen k younger
well was a year younger because the last time we had hot weather was when
last summer
yeah that's right yesterday
uh... i think that the thing all through the winter i have another problem but
then again we have that he played for a couple weeks back in
yeah there was again it's likely to be the radio and there's no had the problem But then again we had that heat wave a couple of weeks back and yeah there was again
It's likely to be the radiator and there's no way you can flow test it in the car that I know of so pressure testing
Is not the thing to do. No no pressure testing will test for leaks flow testing
We'll find out if there's enough flow of water coolant going through the radiator, so how much are we talking to flow tester radiator?
Oh, it's cheap, but to replace the radiator which you will have to do is gonna be several hundred dollars even if you do it yourself. Oh boy. Oh that's
alright you don't want to endanger this new engine. No I want to mean it's been
running great. And I know you want to be able to drive on the track again so yeah.
I mean if the engine had just been rebuilt like a few weeks ago you would
have you should have expected that because the engine would still be tight
assuming they really replaced everything yeah
But you've got 15,000 miles on it, so that's not the problem. It's the radiator absolutely guaranteed
This is a hundred percent guarantee. This may be the only correct answer of the day
I'm honored. I'll call you if it is. Get the radiator out. Have it flow tested at just about any garage.
Well, you have to take it to a radiator shop. Look in your yellow pages.
Uh-huh. Yeah.
Okay. If you don't find one, call us back.
Any old shop is not going to be able to do it.
Any old shop will take it out, but they won't be able to flow test it.
Well, I'll go with the radiator. If it's only a couple hundred, I'm relatively relieved.
It's always going to be bent when it doesn't fix anything.
See you, Craig. Thanks for calling.
Is he still on the line? Bye-bye. We'll be right back with more calls after these messages.
On the TED Radio Hour, over the last few years, former White House chef Sam Cass
has been hosting meals that he calls last suppers on the menu ingredients that are at risk
because of climate change.
I hope it's not that people feel guilty or depressed.
My hope is that we understand what the stake is really like fully our way of
life.
The future of food that's on the Ted radio hour from NPR.
Want to maximize your summer without stretching your budget?
LifeKids got you covered with guides on exploring your neighborhood for cheap.
Don't let money or time be the thing that decides whether or not you will have fun.
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Make the most of every day this summer, whether you're jet setting or staying close to home.
Listen to the LifeKit podcast from NPR.
How does the brain process memories?
Why is AI a solution and a problem for our climate?
What is leadership in 2025 and beyond?
The TED Radio Hour explores the biggest questions and the most complicated ideas of our time
with the world's greatest thinkers.
Listen now to the TED Radio Hour from NPR.
Have you ever thought about the political leanings
of sports fans?
The most democratic leaning sports fan base
was the WNBA, like by a comfortable distance.
But that could change if the WNBA continues
with its explosive growth, because as new fans show up,
some of them are bringing old culture war battles.
Listen to It's Been A Minute from NPR.
["It's Been A Minute From NPR"]
Hi, we're back. You're listening to Car Talk on National Public Radio with us clicking clack the tappet brothers
and we're here to attempt to discuss cars, car repair and BBC news.
Can you top this?
Get this.
Now this is the news that I want to hear.
This is a note from Melanie Herrholzer from Tallahassee, Florida, who says in her PS,
did you know there's a Tallahassee in every state?
Dear Tom and Ray, when I heard Tommy's plea for mail last week, I decided to quit procrastinating
and send these news clippings to you from the Tallahassee Democrat.
One of them is definitely car related, I'm not going to even read that one, and the other
two are sort of car talk related
Here's one
Ukrainian wrestlers meet hostile primates a visit to the zoo by the Ukrainian Olympic wrestling team
Lost some of its public relations value and the visitors were showered with droppings thrown by a chimpanzee
Sandy Peck the Jacksonville Zoo's coordinator of animal encounters,
coordinator of animal encounters,
I got it, I got it.
This is this person's title, said the burly wrestlers were apparently seen as a threat to the male chimpanzees
who often protect their territory and their mates by hurling waste at the strangers.
Is this the female wrestling team or the...?
I don't know. That's the item number one item number two
her name is bonita conchita marita havana banana pulovski
she was a cornucopia of fruit on her head
a hot pink bikini with a strategically placed orange and grape
with strategically placed oranges and grapes
and she wants
to be Tampa's next mayor. Fee-fee-fie-fie-foo-foo-fum, look out Tampa here I come
she's saying in a thick coochie coochie accent this weekend as she kicked off
her candidacy to the 1960s to endeavor with the blue dress on. Though her
campaign appears downright fruity the 37 year old registered candidate has a
platform she calls for increased tourism including the use of cruise ship
casinos and beer convention center the dadada dadada dadada dadada dadada
campaign spokesman terry kuda said banana recently changed the name to take
on the persona of a banana candidate she's a serious candidate this is just
her angle but here's her picture and this woman is wearing fruit everywhere
Shades of common Miranda now this these two items made me realize that what the world needs is not the damn BBC news
No, what the world needs is the weekly world news on radio
Wouldn't that be a winner wacky world news wacky news, and I volunteer to be the Connie Chung of that show.
Okie doke.
Okie doke.
Ok, now on a more serious note.
I'll get serious.
As our regular listener knows, the puzzler is on summer vacation.
Now we can come up with some lame story
about our poor hard working puzzle
needing a well deserved week in the mountains.
But the truth is, every year about this time,
I run out of good, actually every year about January,
I run out of good puzzlers and I milk it until about June.
You do.
So I need a couple of months to collect some new ones
and you have to help.
So if you have a puzzle you think we can use in the fall
or even the winter or any time. Please send it to us at Puzzler Tower, Card Talk Plaza,
Post Office Box 3500, Harvard Square, Cambridge, Our Fair City, Massachusetts 02238. And don't
forget if I get yours right away and I use it early on in the season. You might get your little cup by maybe Christmas. Right. 97. Yes and of course we will if you do use
your puzzle we will send you a token of appreciation. The emphasis here is on the
word token. Anyway if you'd like to call us the number is 1-800-332-9287
hello you're on Car Talk. this is Spencer from Miami Spencer Spencer
yeah is that with an s like the writer or with a C Spencer and CER yeah yeah
where you from from Miami Miami yeah yeah what's happening man yeah I have a
87 Accord mm-hmm and it's five-speed and I needed new tires so I got the tires and got
them all balanced and everything and I don't know, just on a whim, one day after I finished
driving I touched the lug nuts and they were too hard to touch and I was wondering if this
is normal or if it's a
problem it's a problem well the more important question is what prompted you
after all these years of driving to touch your lug nuts even more strange
isn't it
I mean you were driving along let me get this right you pulled over said
I think I'm gonna touch the lug nuts. Yeah
Well, actually I'd come home and I just said let me touch the lug nut
Don't don't question it if if God told Spencer that he should touch the lug nuts
Then there must be a reason for
it.
There must be.
There must be.
And you touched the lug nuts on how many wheels?
Just the front wheels, the left and right.
And they were both very hot.
Very hot.
And equally hot.
Equally hot.
That's good.
That's what they should be.
They should be.
Yeah.
Well, they shouldn't be too hot to touch.
Oh, yeah.
They should be warm. No,
if you've been driving the car and using the brakes. Uh-huh.
How long had you been driving? Oh, that day? I've probably been about half an hour.
Don't forget, in Florida, even without using the brakes at all, the lug nuts are
gonna be a hundred degrees anyway. You're starting off at a hundred. Just parked.
This week it's been that way, that right, in the high high 90s. Right and if you're parked in the sun they're going to be even hotter. So they're already hot enough to burn you even without driving the car. So it doesn't take very much braking to get the temperature of those things way up over 200 degrees where they would feel very very hot. They were very very hot. That's good. That means you have front brakes and they're working. Well I I mean, if you have been driving for half an hour, like on the highway, and only
stepped on the brakes one or two times, I don't think the lug nuts should be hot.
What makes the lug nuts hot is the friction between the brake pads and the
rotors, and if you had done a lot of braking, I would think that the lug nuts
would be very, very hot. But if you you hadn't it might mean that the pads are jammed up against the rotors
Because the calipers are frozen unlikely. It's worth looking at any of your neighbors. See you touching your lug nuts
You don't think so
It wouldn't hurt if you drop by the mechanic to ask him to just take a peek. No, they'll charge you money. If they're both the same temperature, first of all, you
weren't having any problems. I mean, there was no obvious reason in your mind why you
should go and investigate the temperature of the lug nuts. During the Philistine prophecies.
It was just that, you know, I got new tires. You got new tires and you just wanted to make
sure that the lug nuts were still on. and why do they decided to touch them?
Right to make sure that they were still on and hot right and that the guys hadn't messed up and forgotten to tighten them up
I'm right. Yeah. No. Yeah, exactly. I know exactly the feeling I have that every time
Get my car check everything
No, I don't think there's anything wrong and the fact that they are they were equally hot Every time you get in my car, you check everything.
No I don't think there's anything wrong and the fact that they were equally hot tells
me that everything is fine.
You know the likelihood that both calipers are seized.
I will admit that that does suggest that there isn't anything wrong.
The fact that they were both, both wheels with the same temperature, does suggest there's
nothing wrong.
On the other hand, I have touched lug nuts. I'll be I'll admit it on radio I'll stand right here and say I have touched lug nuts also, and they are not boiling hot when I touch them
What people watching you I?
Have done it when people watching me as well. Yes, okay, and they were not boiling hot unless something was wrong
So I would have I if it were I, I would have someone look at it.
If it was my brother, he obviously would.
Alright, can I go and redirect?
I'll ask you my brother.
Have you ever lived in Florida?
No.
Okay, I rest my case.
See ya Spencer.
Thanks for calling man.
Bye. Bye bye.
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