Wheel Nuts

Nov 6, 2024
5
0
Assume originally the wheel nuts would of been matched the wheel colour?



Instead of getting them repainted could I use these?

https://amzn.eu/d/gPXoVcI
1000041173.jpg
 

SRGTD

Active Member
May 26, 2014
2,825
1,682
I don’t think I’ve ever had wheel bolts that have matched the wheel colour - they’ve always been a silvery grey (anodised?) finish and hidden under the wheel bolt covers. If you do get them painted, there’s a risk the painted surface will get damaged if / when you need new tyres and the tyre fitter gets to work on them with an air gun to remove / refit your wheels!

A set of plastic covers like those in your picture would be the answer IMHO; cheap to buy and replace if necessary. The bolt covers in your picture are suffering from the effects of a harsh car washing product or dedicated (acids based?) wheel cleaning product which is why they have that grey mottled effect rather than a black finish. Make sure only ph neutral shampoos and dedicated wheel cleaning products are used on your alloys if you want maintain their factory finish especially on diamond cut alloys; if you don’t, you could be facing the cost of an expensive wheel refurbishment.
 
Nov 6, 2024
5
0
I don’t think I’ve ever had wheel bolts that have matched the wheel colour - they’ve always been a silvery grey (anodised?) finish and hidden under the wheel bolt covers. If you do get them painted, there’s a risk the painted surface will get damaged if / when you need new tyres and the tyre fitter gets to work on them with an air gun to remove / refit your wheels!

A set of plastic covers like those in your picture would be the answer IMHO; cheap to buy and replace if necessary. The bolt covers in your picture are suffering from the effects of a harsh car washing product or dedicated (acids based?) wheel cleaning product which is why they have that grey mottled effect rather than a black finish. Make sure only ph neutral shampoos and dedicated wheel cleaning products are used on your alloys if you want maintain their factory finish especially on diamond cut alloys; if you don’t, you could be facing the cost of an expensive wheel refurbishment.
Thanks, is there any way of restoring the existing covers and how do I remove them?

Any recommendations regarding products to use on the wheels?
 

SRGTD

Active Member
May 26, 2014
2,825
1,682
I’ve never tried restoring those plastic covers; they’re dirt cheap though so probably easier to replace. Replacement also avoids the need to buy - and cost of buying - any products to restore them, and then finding they don’t work as claimed by the manufacturer.

There are loads of sets of those plastic covers on sites such as eBay - do a search on ‘plastic wheel bolt covers’ or a similar search. Just make sure you get the correct size for your wheel bolts. When you buy a set, they should come with a removal tool included; you ought to have a bolt cover removal tool as part of the spare wheel kit / tyre inflation kit in your car. This is what it looks like;

 
Last edited:

Seriously?

Active Member
Apr 20, 2018
1,498
1,097
As an addition to SRGTD's post, note that if you have locking bolts on your wheels, the set you linked to won't fit those bolts.
Actually, I think Leons need 17mm covers, so those in the link won't fit at all.
 

Lucas90

Active Member
Dec 3, 2023
50
41
My last Leon had the same faded wheel nut covers when I bought it. I just bought a rattle can of matt black paint. Took them off and gave them a couple of coats. They looked great after that and never faded again.

As mentioned above if you did just want to buy new ones you'll need 17mm ones for a Leon not the ones on your link.