The day my wheels almost came off
So last weekend I decided to swap winter tires myself. Felt confident since I watched like five YouTube tutorials. Big mistake number one – thinking videos make you a pro overnight. Grabbed my cheap hydraulic jack from the garage sale. Didn’t even check if it worked smooth. Big mistake number two – trusting sketchy tools with your life.

Got the front driver side up okay. Took the nuts off with my impact wrench. Wheel came off easy. Slapped the new tire on. Started tightening the lugs back on. Heard weird clicking sounds but ignored it. Rookie error number three – ignoring warning signs like an idiot. Finished one wheel feeling smug.
Moved to passenger side. Jack started groaning halfway up. Wheel hung crooked. Shoved the jack handle harder – SNAP! The car dropped suddenly. My coffee mug flew across the driveway. Heart actually stopped for two seconds. Saw the rotor sitting one inch from the concrete. Cold sweat soaked my shirt.
What went wrong?
- Never stabilized on flat ground (driveway slopes slightly)
- Used crappy jack without testing
- Forgot damn lug nut torque specs
- Didn’t put backup jack stands underneath
After breathing into a paper bag, I borrowed neighbor’s proper jack stands. Found the torque specs sticker inside my driver door (duh). Bought new lugs since I stripped three. Finished after sunset, hands shaking.
Simple fixes that save your neck:

- Find level ground – slope physics hates you
- Test jacks empty before they hold death
- Check torque specs – either manual or door sticker
- Two supports minimum – jack PLUS stands
- Retighten after 50 miles – wheels settle weird
Never skipping basics again. Almost paid with my kneecaps for being lazy. Now go check your own tire tools before you end up yelling like me.