Wheel Lugs

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Wheel

Part Number: 40300-06W00
Nissan Nissan
Notes: Order by description.
Other Names: Wheel_road
Replaces: 40300s3500
Description: 2 wheel drive, standard.
Backordered

Wheel

Part Number: 40300-80W10
Nissan Nissan
Notes: Order by description.
Other Names: Wheel Road
Description: 4 wheel drive, sport.
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Wheel

Part Number: 40300-19P25
Nissan Nissan
Other Names: Wheel Road_aluminum
Description: Without turbo.
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Wheel

Part Number: 40300-F6029
Nissan Nissan
Other Names: Wheel Assembly Disc
Description: With turbo, from 12/84.
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Wheel

Part Number: 40300-17C25
Nissan Nissan
Other Names: Aluminum Wheel
Description: Aluminum.
Backordered

Wheel

Part Number: 48400-D3200
Nissan Nissan
Notes: Order by color.
Other Names: Steering Wheel
Description: Sgl, from 9/83.
Backordered

Wheel

Part Number: 40300-19P27
Nissan Nissan
Other Names: Road Wheel Aluminum 16 Inch
Description: With turbo.
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Wheel

Part Number: 40300-21P26
Nissan Nissan
Other Names: Wheel Assembly-Road
Description: With turbo.
Backordered

Wheel

Part Number: 40300-03P25
Nissan Nissan
Other Names: Wheel Assembly Road
Replaces: 4030002p25
Description: Without turbo.
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Wheel

Part Number: 40300-50W01
Nissan Nissan
Notes: Order by description.
Other Names: Road Wheel
Replaces: 4030050w00
Description: 4 wheel drive, standard.
Backordered
Backordered

Wheel

Part Number: 40300-18F27
Nissan Nissan
Other Names: Wheel Road
Replaces: 4030018f25
Description: With turbo, to 12/84.
Backordered

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Why Wheel Lugs Are Critical to Safe Driving

Your wheel lugs plays a vital role in your vehicle's performance. That's why regular maintenance is essential. Wheel lugs are the threaded fasteners that clamp your wheels securely to the hub assembly, creating the mechanical link between your vehicle's drivetrain and the road surface. These components must withstand tremendous forces during every aspect of driving, including acceleration, braking, cornering, and impacts from road irregularities. When wheel lugs fail or loosen, the consequences range from annoying vibrations to catastrophic wheel detachment at highway speeds. Proper installation and timely replacement of damaged wheel lugs ensures your wheels remain securely attached during all driving conditions.

How Wheel Lugs Secure Your Wheels

Wheel lugs create clamping force by threading onto wheel studs that extend from your vehicle's hub assembly. When tightened to the correct torque specification, these fasteners generate enough friction between the wheel and hub to prevent any movement during operation. Your Nissan Versa or Nissan Murano relies on this secure connection to transfer power from the drivetrain through the wheels to the pavement. Each wheel lug features either a conical tapered seat or a ball seat design that matches the corresponding hole in your wheel, ensuring proper load distribution across the contact area. The lugs must maintain consistent tension despite constant vibration from road surface irregularities and thermal expansion from heat produced by nearby brake discs, rotors and hardware. Genuine Nissan wheel lugs are manufactured with precise thread specifications, seat angles, and material hardness that generic aftermarket versions frequently fail to replicate accurately.

Understanding Wheel Lug Deterioration

Wheel lugs fail through corrosion, improper installation practices, and metal fatigue. Road salt and moisture exposure causes rust that penetrates the threads and weakens the fastener's structural integrity. Using impact wrenches without proper torque control can over-tighten lugs, stretching the wheel studs and stripping threads in the process. Under-torquing creates the opposite problem, allowing microscopic movement between components that wears the lug seats and creates elongated mounting holes. Repeated heating and cooling cycles as brakes generate and dissipate heat creates stress within the metal that eventually produces fatigue cracks. Cross-threading during installation damages both the lug and stud threads, compromising their ability to maintain proper clamping force. Cheap aftermarket wheel lugs typically use softer metals that corrode faster and may have incorrect seat geometry that concentrates stress in localized areas rather than distributing it evenly across the contact surface.

When to Replace Your Wheel Lugs

Replace wheel lugs immediately when you observe thread damage, visible cracks in the lug body, or corrosion that extends beyond surface rust. If a lug spins freely without tightening or requires excessive force to thread onto its stud, both components likely need replacement. Check wheel lugs during every tire rotation for signs of deformation, stripped hex patterns from improper tool use, or any looseness after applying proper torque. Any wheel lug that has been cross-threaded, over-torqued, or shows signs of stress must be discarded and replaced rather than reused.

Greenville Nissan is your one-stop shop for keeping your vehicle in top condition.