Alloy bolts?
Alloy bolts?
Bought some preowned 17" alloys for my polo but didn't come with the bolts. I know I can't use the existing ones so how do I know what to order? Obviously I know the 5x100 setup but is there a specific thread or length bolt I need?
-
SRGTD
- Bling Bling Diamond Member
- Posts: 3822
- Joined: Sun Oct 11, 2015 9:40 pm
- Drives: 2020 AW Polo GTI+, Pure White.
- Location: UK
Re: Alloy bolts?
As they're Wolfrace Katana's, have you asked Wolfrace? They ought to be able to help, and I'd have thought they'll be able to supply you with a set that have the correct profile seating face to fit the bolt holes in your wheels.
You may not get the answer from the forum, unless a forum member has the same wheels on their car.
You may not get the answer from the forum, unless a forum member has the same wheels on their car.
- iichel
- Bling Bling Diamond Member
- Posts: 6685
- Joined: Fri Nov 14, 2014 2:14 pm
- Drives: Polo 6R 2.0 TDI, Passat B8 2.0 TSI
- Location: http://mypassat.nl/
Re: Alloy bolts?
bascially, you'll be having two types of wheel bolts that should NOT EVER be mixed up.
you have the simple cones. the side looks straight. like a traffic cone on a stick.
and the spherical heads. they look like half a ball on a stick.

a rule of thumb is:
OEM rims have spherical bolts
aftermarket rims have cones.
you have the simple cones. the side looks straight. like a traffic cone on a stick.
and the spherical heads. they look like half a ball on a stick.

a rule of thumb is:
OEM rims have spherical bolts
aftermarket rims have cones.
Re: Alloy bolts?
I've checked with the manufacturer and they say I'll need a 60 degree tapered bolt but looking at the wheels themselves, the seating looks very much like the sphere shaped bolts rather than a flat surface. I even tried my existing bolts with the radiused heads and they fit fine.iichel wrote: Wed Aug 02, 2017 12:24 pm bascially, you'll be having two types of wheel bolts that should NOT EVER be mixed up.
you have the simple cones. the side looks straight. like a traffic cone on a stick.
and the spherical heads. they look like half a ball on a stick.
a rule of thumb is:
OEM rims have spherical bolts
aftermarket rims have cones.
