Flat tyre, can't get the wheel off. Tried rubber mallet, tried forward/back and slam on brakes, now awaiting WD 40. Any thoughts - other than a kick up the arse for shite design
Off the axle or carrier,Flat tyre, can't get the wheel off. Tried rubber mallet, tried forward/back and slam on brakes, now awaiting WD 40. Any thoughts - other than a kick up the arse for shite design
That makes 2 correct answersAssume you mean that you’ve jacked the wheel up & removed the wheel nuts/bolts & now can’t get an alloy wheel off the hub?
If that’s the case then odds are you’ve got galvanic corrosion between the wheel & hub.
As a first option I’d get a suitably sized piece of wood & a club hammer. Place the wood against the outside edge of the wheel near the rim (end on so you are hitting the end of the grain where it won’t compress as much) & give it a couple of good smacks with the hammer. Then move the wood to 180 degrees opposite & try again. Then back to other side but slightly further around the rim. Repeat all the way around & fingers crossed you’ll get it to free up.
I’ve had it happen once before on a Defender & in the end resorted to using ratchet straps around the spokes of the wheel with the other end attached to the tow bar of another vehicle. I then did the straps up as tight as they’d go to put some pressure on the wheel & repeated the wood & hammer trick.
Once you get it off, go over the hub with a wire brush & use a green kitchen scourer pad on the alloy wheel to remove corrosion. Then use a liberal amount of copper slip on the mating face of the alloy & hub as well as around the inside of the centre of the alloy if it sits on a spigot on the hub. This will ensure that next time it comes off a lot easier!

I was still typing mine when yours landed - in fairness mine is a bit easier to understand & provides some advice on how to reduce chance of it happening againThat makes 2 correct answers![]()
Don’t hit it on the inside! - just go round & around on the outside, it will come off eventually!Thanks, that' what I'm doing, however interning the sterering wheel get a better angle to hit the rim on the inside, the jack collapsed, is now bent and u/s,
Great engineering VW, thanks
With my MGB I'm the same. But I'd ask the question of VW. How is my daughter expected to change a wheel at night when the system is so flawed? Rhetorical question obvs. I'll have to call the AA tomorrow as I don't have a 2 tonne trolley jack. Thanks thoughDon’t hit it on the inside! - just go round & around on the outside, it will come off eventually!
Another lesson you’ve learned the hard way is NEVER rely solely on a jack to support the vehicle especially on newer cars as they seem to be made of cheese painted black! I keep a 2 tonne trolley jack in the back & always slide the spare wheel under the car as soon as it’s jacked up then swap with the flat as soon as it’s off so that there’s always a wheel under the car to stop it if the jack fails![]()
I thought it covered it well with fine details in just bash the **** out of it.I was still typing mine when yours landed - in fairness mine is a bit easier to understand & provides some advice on how to reduce chance of it happening again![]()
Grease us the word, yes you’ve heardCopper slip the mating surfaces once you get it apart
Schoolboy error, not to support it with blocks or stands.A lad I went to school with, I learned had been working under his unsupported Transit twin wheeler, in an isoloated farmyard barn .... he was found a long while after it had collapsed onto him, stone dead.
Same as someone I knew, working under a car on his driveway. His dad came round to see why he hadn't picked is son up from schoolA lad I went to school with, I learned had been working under his unsupported Transit twin wheeler, in an isoloated farmyard barn .... he was found a long while after it had collapsed onto him, stone dead.
No good unless you do all 4, I run road tyres from March to "this year" November on the D-Max as it makes no sense to me scrubbing good off road tyres away for the sake of a 30 min pit stop, while they are "off" a look around the pads and front bearings etc.Copper slip the mating surfaces once you get it apart