agree 4 of 5 tight should not be an issue, but I got to Autozone today 6 p.m. closed 7 p.m. and picked up 2 (only needed 1) but the first one I wanted to make sure threaded on my lug nut and it did not the threads were buggered up so 2nd one went on just fine and so did the 3rd. Lucky I asked to take out of bag 1st one to try first. ONLY 3 bucks per bolt (rockauto was 1.40 each but 7 days shipping plus 3 bucks shipping so not worth waiting for).
I watched utube videos and as we all know take with a grain of salt, but only 2 17mm bolts rusted on holding entire brake caliper assembly and the rotor should hammer out with a rubber mallet tapped from behind and in front to loosen it to pull it off. Then, spin the hub supposedly there is a cutout in front of backplate so can tap out broke off lug nut stud bolt and tap in new one, then put washers in front and use lug nut to seat all the way flat in from behind the lug nut stud bolt. Seems pretty straight forward but when I do something like this utube videos always seems simpler than it does when I do it for real.
I once broke off about 8 years ago an old spark plug I could NOT get out and snapped it off on my dad's old 1986 caprice classic some near 30 years old at the time took it to a repair shop and he said it was not that bad to get out since ON A HOIST is a lot simpler to get out from underneath vs. on top of car only charged like 10 bucks so assuming he got it out pretty easily after I used probably a 1/2 can of penetrating oil on all 8 old spark plugs since were in there LONG time guessing 100K miles or so and 15-20 years or so.
am hoping tomorrow morning a 2-3 hr project since kid has to work tomorrow 4 p.m. and 3 hour drive north so gotta start out hoping 8 a.m. done 11 a.m. when a balmy 43 degrees outside.

I could give him my car to drive I guess while I putz with it when warmer mid-day tomorrow in the 50s though? but then have to drive 6 hours (back and forth ) yet another whole day wasted.
Always something isn't it? I never thought that lug nut stud bolts could break like that especially not cross threaded 16 years old all original must be taking it's toll on metal parts? Must have had a weak metal part or something since not like I crank super tight with 4-way lug wrench very rarely hear a CREAK meaning they are on super tight and these I did not just keep turning and turning not tightening up only on this one.
My luck tomorrow morning using a breaker bar with 17 mm socket end to remove those 2 rusted on brake piston brackets bolts (entire assembly) will not work or worst case I snap them off as well cranking on them as hard as I can to remove. Is suppose to be only around 80 ft lbs. torque but guessing are on there much tighter than that over the decade plus. I looked at brake pads while tire off and will do for now tad bit over 1/2 gone, if not tad more, but before winter should really replace both front brake pads and rotors and do it all right both new will probably last the rest of the entire cars useful life with 150K miles on it now. I hear those old 1.8L toyota matrix/corolla engines last 250-300K but by then the rest of the car will probably fall apart.
All fall and winter long runs very well but every time since last fall when cold starting even if warmed up 5 minutes or so in cold weather or even now warm weather but not as long first few minutes running ONLY idling NO gas, if shift outta park into reverse or into drive the car makes a LOUD buzzing noise like something is rubbing or loose only idling NO gas. Utube videos suggest either tranny or engine mounting bolts (rubber inside worn away) but the noise goes completely away after first 5 minutes of driving or when you step on the gas off idling only. step on gas it goes away unless super cold out like in the winter but eventually goes away totally once engine warms up based on temps.