I think this is backwards. Tighten in the forward driving direction of vehicle (both passenger and driver side) and loosen against the forward driving direction (reverse direction). Dietmar, I am not saying here that you are a looser! ;) Please, don't misunderstand me! D^2 Quoting Dietmar Frensemeyer <StadtApoAchern@xxxxxxxxxxx>: > Always lock against the driving direction and unlock in the driving > direction othwerwise you will become a looser. Lock to the rear - loose > to > the front. > dietmar frensemeyer > europe > 1960 crown fds > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > [mailto:mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Mark McDonald > Sent: Thursday, April 04, 2002 7:52 PM > To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: IML: LH thread lug nuts > > Can someone explain this to me again? I always forget. On the > driver's > side, it's clockwise to tighten, counter-clockwise to loosen. > > On the pass. side, it's clockwise to loosen, counter-clockwise to > tighten? > > Has someone got a little rhyme to help us remember? > > Mark > > Peter Engel wrote: > > > 1970 was the last year for LH thread lug nuts on the RH side of the > > car. For 1971 all lug nuts were RH thread. > > Although I have worked on these cars for over 20 years, I screwed up > > when trying to remove a RH wheel on a 65 Polara this past weekend. > I'm > > busting my guts to crack the first nut loose and trying to fingure > out > > why it's so tight. Then -- DOH!!! -- the source of the "problem" > dawns > > on me. > > > > Pete in PA > > > > >