GLS 550 front caliper carrier bolt torque specs. 85 nm + 45 degrees - Seriously?
This if for the two 21 mm hex bolts that mount the caliper carrier. The 85 NM is straight forward, but then adding 45 degrees doesn't seem correct. I can get about 5 degrees using an 18 inch breaker bar pulling harder than the torque which was required to break the bolts free. Are these torque-yield bolts which can't be reused? I'm able to pull with 150 lbs which would be 225 ft lbs or 305 NM, but I'm not sure even that would get me 45 degrees.. Before I cause serious damage to the hub, I need confirmation of the correct spec.
Help would be greatly appreciated.
(P.S. Why did Mercedes go with 11 mm hex bit for the caliper slider bolts - total nonstandard size. Bit isn't available in my local NAPA, and they can't even order it because Carlisle says "out of stock".
)



5 degrees is pretty small and hard to measure. Are you sure you're measuring it correctly? One full flat of a hex bolt head is 60 degrees.
BTW, resist the urge to call them 21mm bolts. They are 14mm (M14) bolts. The torque for a 21mm bolt would probably be about 500 ft-lbs.
Now I understand my problem; trying to reuse already stretched bolts. Unfortunate (and potentially dangerous) that the YouTube did not say the bolts must be replaced. I'll pick up a new set of 14mm bolts
Follow-up question: Are the rear bolts also single use torque-angle bolts? What is the rear carrier bolt tightening spec - the same 80 nm + 45 degrees?
Dave




Last edited by John CC; Jun 9, 2024 at 10:16 PM.








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Last edited by chassis; Jun 11, 2024 at 09:16 PM.
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