I don't think I've ever replaced one ...
They are a finer pitch thread, which has some sound engineering theory behind it(stronger, less torque needed,), but also makes them prone to galling if you zing them off too fast and they don't have much meat to lose to rust. I assume you're starting lug nuts in an impact to cross thread them, so don't do that!I'm superstitious on Subaru engine oil plugs. ALWAYS replace or they leak on me. Dunno why Subaru drain plugs leak and lugnuts cross-thread. It's just a truth of the universe
I have not changed a crush washer on any of my toyotas since I left the dealership in 2003 and lost my source of free drain plug washers...lol.I have noted increased enthusiasm for changing oil drain crush washers at every oil change. I have never landed on a solid opinion here and wonder what is true. Are crush washers deformed, and forever changed after one crush? Is there any actual design that goes into crush washers? Is there a difference between the golden ones and the silver ones? If they are not to be reused, can we account for people who never change them and never have failures? On the same note, has anyone ever heard of a crush washer failure?
Subaru uses a weird washer that is made in 2 parts, once it is used it is done. On the lug nuts I find using a cordless impact that has bolt removal mode works best, as soon as it cracks it loose the gun slows way down, it does seem to save the threads. Most that I have run into that are crossed have been over tightened at some point usually by some careless tire store jockey.I'm superstitious on Subaru engine oil plugs. ALWAYS replace or they leak on me. Dunno why Subaru drain plugs leak and lugnuts cross-thread. It's just a truth of the universe
Once in a while if they looked suspect …I don't think I've ever replaced one ...
I don't change them at every OCI either. Especially if the area is dry.I have noted increased enthusiasm for changing oil drain crush washers at every oil change. I have never landed on a solid opinion here and wonder what is true. Are crush washers deformed, and forever changed after one crush? Is there any actual design that goes into crush washers? Is there a difference between the golden ones and the silver ones? If they are not to be reused, can we account for people who never change them and never have failures? On the same note, has anyone ever heard of a crush washer failure?
Your wording implied an accusation of lying.See the commented I quoted
Fancy. Sort of what I see on spark plugs. I don't think they get completely crushed when torqued properly but retain some plasticity.Subaru uses a weird washer that is made in 2 parts, once it is used it is done. On the lug nuts I find using a cordless impact that has bolt removal mode works best, as soon as it cracks it loose the gun slows way down, it does seem to save the threads. Most that I have run into that are crossed have been over tightened at some point usually by some careless tire store jockey.
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You have never landed on a solid opinion because so many people are ignorant on how they work.I have noted increased enthusiasm for changing oil drain crush washers at every oil change. I have never landed on a solid opinion here and wonder what is true. Are crush washers deformed, and forever changed after one crush? Is there any actual design that goes into crush washers? Is there a difference between the golden ones and the silver ones? If they are not to be reused, can we account for people who never change them and never have failures? On the same note, has anyone ever heard of a crush washer failure?
You have never landed on a solid opinion because so many people are ignorant on how they work.
They only crush correctly the first time. (Yes, if you heat, then anneal the flat metal ones, they can be made “as new” but thinner. Those who re-use them typically don’t do this).
They should be changed every time.
The “increased enthusiasm” is the propagation of best practice, not some weird psychological phenomenon.
Those who re-use them are asking for a leak, or overtorquing, just to save 15 cents.
Not an opinion to which you should be paying attention.