Christine Posted March 8 Share Posted March 8 10 hours ago, Fennec said: Ooh, thank you for the suggestions, I will have a look Wear trousers ... chadders and 500tops 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hairnet Posted March 9 Share Posted March 9 22 hours ago, Christine said: Wear trousers ... in this weather Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yes oui si Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 On 25/02/2023 at 23:03, mat_the_cat said: What's the real worry with wobble bolts anyway? So long as the wheel is still centralised by the hub I don't see an engineering problem. On 25/02/2023 at 23:28, Scrubworks said: I'm not personally a fan of them, though I admit plenty of other people use them all the time without issue. These are aftermarket wheels, so a hub-centering ring would need to be used. As long as that's made of steel and fits well enough to take some of the load on the centre it should be ok. Most of them are just plastic to align the wheel properly, and the bolts take the load. Just to clear up any confusion, the material of any spigot ring is irrelevant as they don't see any load, their only purpose is to centre the wheel on the hub while you tighten the nuts/bolts. Further to this, the only load a wheel bolt sees is along its length as it applies a clamping force between wheel and hub. Many people seem to think that the wheels are 'pushed' round by the bolts/studs but the driving force transferred from hub to wheel is through friction between the two surfaces which is provided by the bolts/studs and nuts clamping them together. In the case of 'wobble' nuts/bolts (I think that the name puts some off, call them PCD Correction Nuts/Bolts if you'd prefer) the clamping force is still applied directly along the length of the bolt/stud meaning that they are no different to standard equipment, with the obvious caveats regarding grade/specs et cetera. They simply have a collar which is able to float up to 2mm horizontally (at 90° to the clamping force, and which is clamped in place as you tighten them up. This means that you can safely use them for PCDs such as 4x98/100, 4x100/101.6, 5x113/114.3, 5x127/130 et cetera. Anyone scaremongering is either deliberately misleading you or just doesn't know how mechanical fixings work. They may mean well. Anyhoo, fiat good, Fen good. mat_the_cat, Fennec and richardmorris 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rocket88 Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 1 hour ago, yes oui si said: Just to clear up any confusion, the material of any spigot ring is irrelevant as they don't see any load, their only purpose is to centre the wheel on the hub while you tighten the nuts/bolts. Further to this, the only load a wheel bolt sees is along its length as it applies a clamping force between wheel and hub. Many people seem to think that the wheels are 'pushed' round by the bolts/studs but the driving force transferred from hub to wheel is through friction between the two surfaces which is provided by the bolts/studs and nuts clamping them together. In the case of 'wobble' nuts/bolts (I think that the name puts some off, call them PCD Correction Nuts/Bolts if you'd prefer) the clamping force is still applied directly along the length of the bolt/stud meaning that they are no different to standard equipment, with the obvious caveats regarding grade/specs et cetera. They simply have a collar which is able to float up to 2mm horizontally (at 90° to the clamping force, and which is clamped in place as you tighten them up. This means that you can safely use them for PCDs such as 4x98/100, 4x100/101.6, 5x113/114.3, 5x127/130 et cetera. Anyone scaremongering is either deliberately misleading you or just doesn't know how mechanical fixings work. They may mean well. Anyhoo, fiat good, Fen good. Sensible advice…. yes oui si 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hairnet Posted March 16 Share Posted March 16 1 hour ago, yes oui si said: Anyhoo, fiat smol, Fen nuts. fixt Fennec 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fennec Posted March 17 Author Share Posted March 17 Little update on the gearbox. The noise is more like a rattle, or even the noise when you don't quite select a gear properly. It's quite constant and goes away with speed/ increased revs. And I can kinda get it to quieten by moving the gearstick a bit to one side. I'm thinking it may be something as simple as linkages maybe? I still need to get into my scruffy clothes and crawl under at some point but I just had my bloody nails done... 😂 AnnoyingPentium, yes oui si and GrumpiusMaximus 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stuboy Posted March 17 Share Posted March 17 54 minutes ago, Fennec said: I still need to get into my scruffy clothes i have these clothes... it all clothes when not in work uniform Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fennec Posted March 17 Author Share Posted March 17 On 3/16/2023 at 5:33 PM, hairnet said: Anyhoo, fiat smol, Fen nuts. Oi! Not for much longer mind... 🤣 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hairnet Posted March 17 Share Posted March 17 oh youve bought a bigger fiat Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
High Jetter Posted March 17 Share Posted March 17 3 hours ago, stuboy said: i have these clothes... it all clothes when not in work uniform Yea, what size bra! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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