2006 Chevrolet Colorado Lug Nut Torque & Bolt Specs
The 2006 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque is 140 ft-lbs, tightened with a 22mm socket on M14x1.5 studs. Torque in a star pattern in two passes (snug, then final), and re-check after the first 50–100 miles of driving. Use a calibrated torque wrench — not an impact gun — for the final pass. The wheel bolt pattern is 5x120.
Lug nut torque: 140 ft-lbs · Socket size: 22mm · Thread: M14x1.5 · Bolt pattern: 5x120.
This page is the OEM-referenced fastener summary for the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado. Use it before any maintenance or repair job where torque values matter — brake work, wheel changes, suspension service, engine teardowns, or oil changes. Specs are pulled from manufacturer service literature, cross-checked against community data, and updated as new chassis variants become available.
GM lug-nut torque clusters around 140 ft-lbs (190 Nm) for half-ton Silverado/Sierra and 100 ft-lbs for passenger cars like Malibu, Impala, and Cruze. GM heavy-duty trucks (2500HD/3500HD) jump to 165 ft-lbs. Most GM passenger cars use a 19mm socket; trucks moved from 22mm to 22mm-with-deep-well in 2014. Watch for GM's flat-flange lug nut design on the Silverado — the standard cone-seat aftermarket lugs will not seat correctly.
Common fastener categories on the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado
- Wheel / lug nut torque and thread spec (covered above)
- Brake caliper bracket bolts (typically 80-130 ft-lbs) and slide/guide pins (18-35 ft-lbs)
- Engine oil drain plug torque — rarely above 30 ft-lbs; always use a new crush washer
- Transmission pan, valve cover, and intake manifold bolts (low torque, often 89-106 in-lbs)
- Suspension control arm, sway bar, tie rod end and ball joint torque
- Spark plug torque (typically 10-15 ft-lbs on aluminum heads — do not exceed)
- Differential cover bolts (RWD/4WD only) and transfer case fasteners
Repair guidance for this model year
For 2006 model-year work: Always use a calibrated torque wrench for safety-critical fasteners, and replace lock washers and crush washers on every reassembly.
Tools you will need
- Metric socket set (8mm-22mm), 6-point impact-rated
- Calibrated torque wrench (10-150 ft-lbs covers most automotive jobs; add a 0-250 ft-lbs wrench for truck lug nuts)
- Breaker bar (24" minimum) for initial loosening
- Penetrating oil (PB Blaster or Kroil) for any fastener over 5 years old
- Anti-seize on stainless or dissimilar-metal threads; thread-locker (Loctite blue) on critical reassembly
Frequently asked questions
What is the lug nut torque on a 2006 Chevrolet Colorado?
The OEM-specified lug-nut torque for the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado is 140 ft-lbs, using a 22mm socket on M14x1.5 thread studs. Use a calibrated torque wrench in a star pattern, in two passes (50% and 100%), and re-check after 50-100 miles of driving.
What socket size do I need for the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado lug nuts?
The 2006 Chevrolet Colorado uses a 22mm socket. A 6-point impact-rated socket is recommended over a 12-point chrome socket — 12-points round off lug nuts under impact-driver use.
Are the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado fasteners metric or SAE?
Metric is the standard for this vehicle. Most fasteners on this vehicle are metric (M6, M8, M10, M12, M14). Bring a full metric set; SAE substitutes can round the head. Bolt-head markings are the fastest way to confirm grade and material at the bench.
Other Chevrolet Colorado years
Same model, different model year — fastener spec may change. Always confirm against the year for your VIN.
- 2025 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2024 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2023 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2022 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2021 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2020 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2019 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2018 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2017 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2016 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2015 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2012 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2011 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2010 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2009 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
- 2008 Chevrolet Colorado lug nut torque
→ 2006 Chevrolet Colorado oil drain plug torque & size
→ 2006 Chevrolet Colorado suspension & steering torque specs (control arm, ball joint, tie rod)
All 8 2006 Chevrolet Colorado fastener specs
Per-bolt torque, wrench size, and thread spec for the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado, sourced from OEM service literature and verified against community shop data. Values pair imperial (ft-lb) and metric (Nm) where the manufacturer publishes both.
Wheels — 2006 Chevrolet Colorado
Wheel and lug nut spec for the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado. The lug nut uses a 22mm drive on a M14x1.5 thread, torqued to 140 ft-lbs at the all four wheels.
Brakes — 2006 Chevrolet Colorado
Brake fasteners on the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado — caliper bracket, slide pins, and banjo bolt torque follow. At the front caliper slide pin boot and pin, the front brake caliper slide pin torques to 26 ft-lbs (13mm drive, M10x1.5 thread). For the front brake caliper bracket to knuckle, plan for a 18mm tool on a M12x1.75 stud; final torque is 80 ft-lbs (front brake caliper bracket bolt).
Engine — 2006 Chevrolet Colorado
Engine bolt-by-bolt torque for the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado, including the long block, valve covers, and intake. For the cylinder head, plan for a 5/8" (16mm) tool on a M14x1.25 stud; final torque is 15 ft-lbs (spark plug). Oil drain plug tightens to 18 ft-lbs, takes a 15mm driver, runs on M12x1.75 threads, located at the oil pan.
Suspension — 2006 Chevrolet Colorado
Suspension and chassis fastener torque for the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado — strut, control arm, and sway bar values. Sway bar end link nut tightens to 67 ft-lbs, takes a 15mm driver, runs on M12x1.75 threads, located at the front sway bar end link. The front hub/bearing nut uses a 36mm drive on a M24x1.5 thread, torqued to 177 ft-lbs at the front axle hub bearing.
Steering — 2006 Chevrolet Colorado
Steering linkage fasteners on the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado. The tie rod end nut uses a 19mm drive on a M12x1.75 thread, torqued to 55 ft-lbs at the outer tie rod end to steering knuckle.
New to torquing wheels? Read our How lug nut torque works — the complete guide for star-pattern sequence, re-torque intervals, and how to read a lug spec — then use the 2006 Chevrolet Colorado numbers above.
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