OP doesn't have a hybrid, unless they removed the badge, so that may be an option. Maybe cost prohibitive. New rotors, probably different caliper and mounts, ETC. Maybe even new wheels, as mine are 18", I think non hybrids are 17"?If you are hard on brakes, maybe you need bigger brakes. The hybrids have bigger brakes. Look into an OEM upgrade.
It's actually in the manual (at 1000 mi)Please tell us more. I have not heard that nugget of wisdom concerning rotors before. I know I need to do that just to make sure nothing backed off.
So your theory is a better sell, if the driver side wheel studs have left hand thread. Loose wheel nuts will allow the run to chafe material away from the wheel studs like a beaver chewing through a tree. I have seen it many times. Also advised to lubricate wheel stud threads to prevent false torque when torquing the wheel nuts, using grease can also create false torque as well, trapped greaseā¦ a thin oil is ideal.There's two forces at work here, both have to do with lugging your nuts. So when you got loose nuts, you wobble. That wobble is gonna cause some rotational imbalances on your rotors, thus speeding up wear.
2ndly, when you got tight nuts, that counter clockwise potential energy is gonna wanna counter your positive travel in a linear direction, thus adding a lot of friction (so think heat and wear) into the rotors and eventually warp them.
Yikes!!!The worst case Iāve seen was on my own vehicle, from a mechanic who worked at the shop where I was (I worked the desk). I had to use a floor jack handle on a breaker bar to break the lugsāyes, you read that right.
Yeah, I was really pissed. I discovered it after I had left for another store. If it was on purposeāwhich it really seems to beāI cannot think of anything I did or said that could have caused it.Yikes!!!