I use a torque stick that attached to my air gun. It is set to 100 foot pounds. I use that for almost all cars with alloy wheels.
if alloy head 40nm then tighten 90 degrees
760 ft lbs is recommended
2010 Honda Pilot alloy wheels require 94 ft/lbs or 127 Nm of torque
It is dependent on what model of Buick and whether it is equipped with steel or alloy wheels.
76 ft/lbs (103 Nm)
Yes, for example, all 400 series stainless steel has no nickel in the alloy.
80 - 90 lbs on aluminum alloy wheels and 100 lbs on steel. Check torque after driving 30 miles.
About 85ft lbs. If they are alloy, recheck after 25 miles.
Alloy: 75 ft/lbs steel: 90 ft/lbs
The series is still called Mistborn, but the new setting starts with the book The Alloy of Law.
100 psi if you are talking lug nuts. Pretty vague question.
85 to 105 Ft-lbs