Hi Steve.
I have heard that story too, for well over 20 years.
When I first heard it, I may have remembered enough of my college "structures" classes to explain why the story was wrong. Today, who knows what I remember, but here is my best shot.
Working backwards, the weight of the car (load) is transferred from the tires to the wheels and then to the hub. The load is then transferred from the hub to the front axle through two points of contact, each made via the inner and outer wheel bearings, with the primary load being transferred through the inner bearing, which is why it is larger. It does not make any difference what is between these two points of contact, unless whatever it is, in this case the distance piece, becomes part of the axle. In the case of the distance piece, just because it is tight between the two bearings, it is not adhered to the axle and therefor is not part of the axle. There is still an air space between the distance piece and the face of the axle. The load being transferred through the wheel bearings to the axle dos not pass through the distance piece. Think how plywood or laminated veneer lumber works. Without each layer of veneer being bonded to the layers that it contacts, each layer of would act independently, like the loose pages of a phone book. But when bonded, the structural capability dramatically increases.
So, if it is not transferring load, and not an inherent part of the axle, what does it do? It performs the function Steve described.
I have heard that story too, for well over 20 years.
When I first heard it, I may have remembered enough of my college "structures" classes to explain why the story was wrong. Today, who knows what I remember, but here is my best shot.
Working backwards, the weight of the car (load) is transferred from the tires to the wheels and then to the hub. The load is then transferred from the hub to the front axle through two points of contact, each made via the inner and outer wheel bearings, with the primary load being transferred through the inner bearing, which is why it is larger. It does not make any difference what is between these two points of contact, unless whatever it is, in this case the distance piece, becomes part of the axle. In the case of the distance piece, just because it is tight between the two bearings, it is not adhered to the axle and therefor is not part of the axle. There is still an air space between the distance piece and the face of the axle. The load being transferred through the wheel bearings to the axle dos not pass through the distance piece. Think how plywood or laminated veneer lumber works. Without each layer of veneer being bonded to the layers that it contacts, each layer of would act independently, like the loose pages of a phone book. But when bonded, the structural capability dramatically increases.
So, if it is not transferring load, and not an inherent part of the axle, what does it do? It performs the function Steve described.