PSJ
Senior Member

Offline
Hello Healey friends! This is a kind-of-embarrassing issue, but I will forge on, regardless. The issue is regarding wire-wheel hub nuts (the nuts holding the splined wire wheel hub and axle to the hub/bearing carrier) appearing to loosen themselves. Please excuse any improper terminology.
Background
Recently I helped my Dad with his 1953 BN1, converting his pumpkin from a 4.11 to a 3.9. The rear end is NOT the original, but a later type (helical?). I helped him get the pumpkin out, and after he had the new R & P installed, put it back in. He performed the finishing touches, like re-installing the axles, putting the drums and wheels back on, etc.
After it was all together, he invited me to captain it for a test drive. Everything seemed fine, until about 5 miles in, I began to perceive a problem - untoward movement of some type in the rear of the car. When we examined the car, it appeared that the left rear hub nuts had not been thoroughly tightened, and that the wire wheel hub was experiencing movement relative to the hub carrier. The hub nuts had been damaged, but the studs appeared OK. My Dad tightened the nuts and ordered new ones, thinking that the problem had been diagnosed and temporarily addressed.
Later, my Dad took the car for a drive. The new nuts had not been received, so the car still had the old (damaged) nuts. He made it a few miles, but again experienced similar issues. Upon examination, nuts had again loosened, two studs had broken off and others were damaged.
Hypothesis (please throw rocks at it!)
The problem has it's root cause in the original assembly, where the nuts were not appropriately tightened. Afterwards, the damaged nuts were not in appropriate condition to take further stress, thus the second failure and damage. (Note: the bearing carrier was not loosened or removed during the work; nor does it appear to have been damaged; nor were the axles completely removed from the axle housing when we switched the R & P). With this assumption, correct installation of new studs and nuts should cure this issue.
My request of you!
Could you please consider and let me know your thoughts? I can't think of any other root cause diagnosis, as the hub carrier was not touched during the work. Could the new R & P be putting stress on one axle? That seems unlikely.
Last item: Regarding the removal of the hub carrier for the installation of new studs: do you have any specific comments or direction? I know that, on some MG's, the torque value of the main hub carrier/bearing retaining nut is critical. My Dad has a service manual for the Healey, so I was just going to follow that. (Hmmm . . . it might not have the right instructions for the later rear axle - I'll have to check).
So geez! Sorry for such a long message; and thanks in advance for your help.
Phil
Background
Recently I helped my Dad with his 1953 BN1, converting his pumpkin from a 4.11 to a 3.9. The rear end is NOT the original, but a later type (helical?). I helped him get the pumpkin out, and after he had the new R & P installed, put it back in. He performed the finishing touches, like re-installing the axles, putting the drums and wheels back on, etc.
After it was all together, he invited me to captain it for a test drive. Everything seemed fine, until about 5 miles in, I began to perceive a problem - untoward movement of some type in the rear of the car. When we examined the car, it appeared that the left rear hub nuts had not been thoroughly tightened, and that the wire wheel hub was experiencing movement relative to the hub carrier. The hub nuts had been damaged, but the studs appeared OK. My Dad tightened the nuts and ordered new ones, thinking that the problem had been diagnosed and temporarily addressed.
Later, my Dad took the car for a drive. The new nuts had not been received, so the car still had the old (damaged) nuts. He made it a few miles, but again experienced similar issues. Upon examination, nuts had again loosened, two studs had broken off and others were damaged.
Hypothesis (please throw rocks at it!)
The problem has it's root cause in the original assembly, where the nuts were not appropriately tightened. Afterwards, the damaged nuts were not in appropriate condition to take further stress, thus the second failure and damage. (Note: the bearing carrier was not loosened or removed during the work; nor does it appear to have been damaged; nor were the axles completely removed from the axle housing when we switched the R & P). With this assumption, correct installation of new studs and nuts should cure this issue.
My request of you!
Could you please consider and let me know your thoughts? I can't think of any other root cause diagnosis, as the hub carrier was not touched during the work. Could the new R & P be putting stress on one axle? That seems unlikely.
Last item: Regarding the removal of the hub carrier for the installation of new studs: do you have any specific comments or direction? I know that, on some MG's, the torque value of the main hub carrier/bearing retaining nut is critical. My Dad has a service manual for the Healey, so I was just going to follow that. (Hmmm . . . it might not have the right instructions for the later rear axle - I'll have to check).
So geez! Sorry for such a long message; and thanks in advance for your help.
Phil