SteveHall64Healey
Jedi Trainee
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Gents, does anyone have a spec for how tightly eared knock-offs are to be set?
thanks
steve
thanks
steve
Gents, does anyone have a spec for how tightly eared knock-offs are to be set?
thanks
steve
... I did find a really fancy tool from some engineering whiz in I think Germany that you can attach to a torque wrench if your really fussy . ... .
Back when I was twenty years of age, the same rear wheel came off the 100-6 twice in one evening at highway speeds. The car barely bumped as the drum hit the pavement and the wheel passed the slowing car. Fortunately, no other traffic was nearby. The second time it was rather dark, and it took a while to find the wheel in the ditch. The knock off was still stuck to the wheel.
Someone told me that the knock off/wheel was not greased properly, as an explanation for the wheel coming off. Based on what others say above, it sounds as if the hub was installed on the wrong side of the car. Interestingly, I drove this car thousands of miles, before and after that evening, without the wheel coming off.
Impossible , cant happen . The wheel hub is splined to match the stub axle , unless the splines were completely torn off the hub and it was installed on the wrong side and it got so hot the knock off welded to the wheel ?
Mine has enough wear in the splines so there is play between hub and spline. If the knock offs aren't really snug, my wheels clunk occasionally when I step on the brakes or reverse direction. I use a soft lead hammer and beat those ears unmercifully and that stops the clunking.
I have lost a wheel, but not from the knock off unwinding. Rather, the four wimpy Whitworth studs on the BN1 hub stripped out, another story there.[/QUOTEOne of these days you may have hit the brakes and the wheel(s) will keep turning on the spine and you won't be able to stop the car with the brakes. I know people that say they have seen it happen.
I had things happen in the 70's for which there is no explanation.
Chris...