Dangle_kt
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posted on 11/3/12 at 09:42 PM |
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OT - Damaged hub - advice/spotting skills needed
I bought a bike trailer the other month off a classified ad, collected it at night, gave it a quick look over, but it was raining, and cheap so
didn't hang around. I noticed the hub didnt look right, but they guy said "its just missing the hub cover, they just slip on, but its
never bothered me"
It then got dumped in my garage for a fair few weeks, came to look at it last weekend and was pretty shocked by what I found.
The cast hub is completly smashed up, the bearing is barely held in place by what remains, and even that has massive cracks in it.
smashed hub
smashed hub2
The guy let me drive that thing home in that state!! So please folks - learn from my mistake and check important parts like running gear before
taking on the roads!!
Anyway, I basically need to find a replacement - so does anyone recognise the hub? It's a braked one. This is the "good" side
good hub
and the super rusty back side
back of hub
And if no one recognises it - what is the best locost option to sort a replacement? I would imagine it would be safer to do it as a pair?
This is the running gear set up
trailer running gear
running gear 2
I assume chopping it off at the 90 bend in the axle, weld a replacement stub axle to some box, weld box to axle? That way I'd need complete
wheel/hub/stub assembly...or are stub axles standardised, so I can just buy a new hub?
Thanks in advance
P.s. I know its v rusty - it needs some love once fixed up
[Edited on 11/3/12 by Dangle_kt]
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owelly
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posted on 11/3/12 at 10:36 PM |
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That hub has seen some action! Even the studs and nuts look to have been on an adventure! I would say buy a set of indespension units and a beam to
bolt them to. Cheapish at Towsure, Discount Towing or 'Towing and Trailers'. Failing that, scrapyard and tapemeasure to see if you can
find a rear axle out of a small car or van to fasten to your springs.
Those hubs look like very old Avon units, possibly off a small sheep or general purpose trailer.
http://www.ppcmag.co.uk
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jabs
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posted on 12/3/12 at 07:17 AM |
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The 'Good' side looks as if it has only 3 wheel nuts and the fourth stud has sheared
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MikeRJ
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posted on 12/3/12 at 07:25 AM |
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quote: Originally posted by owelly
Those hubs look like very old Avon units, possibly off a small sheep.
Quite unusual to see sheep with braked hubs
You can get complete braked live axle assemblies that would probably be the
simplest way to fix this, though not cheap.
Do you actually need brakes on it? If you you could get an unbraked axle for much less money from the same place in the above link.
There are some braked hubs here, might be worth measuring yours and seeing if you can
find a match.
Lots more brake hubs here.
[Edited on 12/3/12 by MikeRJ]
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SeaBass
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posted on 12/3/12 at 10:26 AM |
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I sold an old bathroom suite on Gumtree. When the chap turned up with his trailer one of the hubs had seized somewhere on the journey and he'd
literally dragged it the rest of the way.
I was on the drive - he got out and said - oh I must have got a puncture. I had to convince him that the hub needed freed off or he would have driven
away "sanding" his spare wheel against the road. I managed to free it in two minutes and pack the bone dry ball races with grease.
Some people are just inept.
The studs do look in terrible order too as others have mentioned.
JC
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Neville Jones
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posted on 12/3/12 at 12:21 PM |
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The wheel looks like a Metro or Mini wheel. Maybe a trailer whel supplied by STARCO to most of the trailer mobs. What's the stud pcd?
If the drum/hub is one piece, then most of the trailer companies should have replacements, as they are fairly well standardised.
Cheers,
Nev
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rusty nuts
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posted on 12/3/12 at 07:51 PM |
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A prize example of why trailers and caravans should have an MOT
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