Back to that 1995 Corolla my mom crashed:
We replaced the door with a junk yard like color one, and bent it a little to fit the slightly bent body of the car. So it is sealed up ok with no leak now.
Today I got a call from my dad. He told me that he changed the oil (because it is time) and rotated the tire, and found out that the lug nut is hard to remove and almost/already stripped the wheel hub bolts when he remove it. Now he cannot put the wheel back on because the nut wouldn't go back in, and the car is on jack stand.
What surprises me is that not only the right side, where the car was hit, got the bolt bent, but the left side as well. I've driven the car after the accident for about 30 minutes and can definitely tell that the alignment is off. The steering wheel is at 20-30 degree to the right when you want the car to go straight.
So our only choice is to replace the hub at home because it is not going anywhere without the wheel on. What I'm thinking is in addition to the hub, we probably should replace the axles, ball joints, tie rod end links, bearing, front rotors (because they were at minimum thickness about 15k miles ago, and they may be bent along with the hub) and may be the control arm (may be not, that thing is pretty tough). This car has 187k miles already and my mom hit a few curb real hard before, and the alignment needed a camber kit last time to get the camber right. The strut was done 30-40k ago so I think they are probably still good.
How hard is it to get the spindle nut off without an impact gun? Would a breaker bar or a cheater stick with 1/2" rachet be enough? PB Blaster is on sale and I have some left over 4' 1/2" dia. water pipe somewhere.
Any recommendation? I'd figure doing the minimum is good because very likely my mom will crash something or hit something again, and she cannot drive anything harder to drive than a corolla without killing herself.
We replaced the door with a junk yard like color one, and bent it a little to fit the slightly bent body of the car. So it is sealed up ok with no leak now.
Today I got a call from my dad. He told me that he changed the oil (because it is time) and rotated the tire, and found out that the lug nut is hard to remove and almost/already stripped the wheel hub bolts when he remove it. Now he cannot put the wheel back on because the nut wouldn't go back in, and the car is on jack stand.
What surprises me is that not only the right side, where the car was hit, got the bolt bent, but the left side as well. I've driven the car after the accident for about 30 minutes and can definitely tell that the alignment is off. The steering wheel is at 20-30 degree to the right when you want the car to go straight.
So our only choice is to replace the hub at home because it is not going anywhere without the wheel on. What I'm thinking is in addition to the hub, we probably should replace the axles, ball joints, tie rod end links, bearing, front rotors (because they were at minimum thickness about 15k miles ago, and they may be bent along with the hub) and may be the control arm (may be not, that thing is pretty tough). This car has 187k miles already and my mom hit a few curb real hard before, and the alignment needed a camber kit last time to get the camber right. The strut was done 30-40k ago so I think they are probably still good.
How hard is it to get the spindle nut off without an impact gun? Would a breaker bar or a cheater stick with 1/2" rachet be enough? PB Blaster is on sale and I have some left over 4' 1/2" dia. water pipe somewhere.
Any recommendation? I'd figure doing the minimum is good because very likely my mom will crash something or hit something again, and she cannot drive anything harder to drive than a corolla without killing herself.
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