Description
When you’re crawling along at three miles per hour planting corn or making sharp turns with a loaded loader bucket, the last thing you want to worry about is a wheel coming off your tractor. That front axle hub nut might look like just another piece of hardware, but it’s what keeps your front wheels attached when they’re taking the punishment of steering forces, loader work, and rough terrain. A loose or damaged hub nut isn’t just inconvenient—it’s the kind of failure that can turn a normal workday into a dangerous situation or expensive wreck.
What You’re Getting
- Heavy-duty steel construction that handles front axle loads without stretching or failing
- Precision threads cut to exact specifications for proper torque retention
- Quality materials that resist the corrosion and thread damage common in farm conditions
- Proper hardness prevents loosening under the constant vibration and stress cycles tractors endure
- Direct replacement that fits multiple Massey Ferguson series without modifications
Built for Real Farm Work
This hub nut works across Massey Ferguson’s lineup from the compact 300 series utility tractors up through the heavy-duty 6400 series field machines. Whether you’re running a 3000 series with a loader around the farmyard, pulling tillage equipment with a 4300, or harvesting with a big 6200, your front axle takes constant abuse from steering forces and ground contact. These tractors handle everything from daily chores to serious field operations where wheel security isn’t optional.
Made to Last
Front axle hardware faces some of the toughest conditions on your tractor—constant vibration, shock loads from rough ground, and exposure to moisture and chemicals that destroy inferior parts. This hub nut uses quality steel with the right hardness to maintain proper clamping force without the thread stretching that lets wheels work loose over time.
Installation Notes
Hub nut installation requires a torque wrench—too loose and the wheel can separate, too tight and you risk damaging threads or bearings. Clean all threads thoroughly and use anti-seize compound to prevent future problems. Always recheck torque after the first few hours of operation, as components can settle and require retightening.






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