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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Hilux surf-Wheel studs nuts

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Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 17mm - RTWNS17

Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 17mm - RTWNS17

$28
Fitment Notes:
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Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 21mm - RTWNS21

Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 21mm - RTWNS21

$28
Fitment Notes:
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Explore 4WD & Adventure

Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 19mm - RTWNS19

Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 19mm - RTWNS19

$28
Fitment Notes:
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Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 22mm - RTWNS22

Repco 1/2in Dr. Wheel Nut Impact Socket 22mm - RTWNS22

$28
Fitment Notes:
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T&E Tools 4 Way Foldable Wheel Brace 20in - 6033

T&E Tools 4 Way Foldable Wheel Brace 20in - 6033

$81
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Showing 1 - 12 of 12 products

2006 Toyota Hilux Surf wheel studs and nuts

Wheel studs and nuts are absolutely used on the 2006 Toyota Hilux Surf. Technical references including the Toyota Repair Manual for the N210-series Hilux Surf/4Runner (2002–2009) and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) show six pressed-in wheel studs on each hub, secured by wheel nuts (not wheel bolts). Typical specification is a six-stud hub (6 x 139.7) with M12 x 1.5 threads and tapered-seat nuts, though owners should confirm exact nut style for their specific wheels.

On this Hilux Surf, the wheel studs and nuts do a simple but critical job: they clamp the wheel evenly to the hub so the brake rotor/drum and wheel move as one. Reliable clamping keeps tyres wearing evenly, prevents vibration, and protects brake and suspension bits from nasty shock loads—especially important for Kiwi and Aussie roads, gravel, and off‑road work.

As part of regular servicing, it’s smart to give the studs and nuts a look and a proper torque. A quick visual check can pick up stretched studs, rusty splines, or rounded and galled nut seats. If a nut feels gritty to spin or a stud thread looks chewed out, replace it—don’t try to “chase” it with a die and hope for the best. Toyota’s repair manual specifies torque and fitting procedures, use a torque wrench and tighten in a star pattern. After any wheel-off job—new tyres, brake work, rotations—re-check torque after 50–100 km.

  • Keep threads dry and clean. Don’t lubricate studs or nut seats unless the service manual specifically says so, lube changes clamp load and can crack wheels or rotors.
  • Clean the hub and wheel mating faces so nothing sits between them—rust flakes or mud can cause a false torque and loose wheels later.
  • If a stud spins in the hub or won’t seat, the splines or hub bore may be flogged out. In that case, replace the hub or flange as required.
  • Replace any nut with a damaged seat, swelling, or plating loss. Match the nut style (tapered vs mag-seat with washer) to the wheel type.
  • Avoid rattle-gunning nuts on from the start, hand-start to protect threads, then finish with a torque wrench to the factory spec in the Toyota manual.

Pressed-in studs on the Hilux Surf can be changed individually. Generally the brake rotor or drum comes off, the old stud is pressed or driven out, and the new stud is drawn in square to the flange using a spacer and a sacrificial nut or a press. Quality studs and nuts—genuine or reputable aftermarket—are cheap insurance for touring, towing, and off‑road reliability.

What size and thread are the wheel nuts on a 2006 Toyota Hilux Surf?

They’re commonly M12 x 1.5 on a six-stud (6 x 139.7) hub. Nut seat style can vary with wheel type (alloy vs steel), so match the nut to the wheel. Always confirm against the Toyota owner’s or repair manual and torque to the factory spec.

Can a single damaged wheel stud be replaced on a 2006 Hilux Surf?

Yes. The studs are pressed into the hub/flange and can be replaced individually. The job usually involves removing the brake rotor/drum, pressing or driving the old stud out, and drawing the new one in square. If the stud splines won’t grip, the hub may need replacement.

Do the wheel nuts need re-checking after tyre or brake work?

They should be re-torqued after 50–100 km of driving. Hand-start nuts, tighten in a star pattern with a torque wrench to the Toyota specification, and avoid lubricating the threads or seats unless the manual instructs otherwise.