The tops of the hub splines should be flat, not rounded. From the
side, the profile of the spline is an isosceles trapezoid.
The hubs are (probably) cut round on a lathe, then the splines are
cut perpendicular. If you look at new hub splines with a magnifying
glass, you can see the machine marks from the lathe on the top.
If the splines are "sharp;" i.e. there is no flat surface on the top,
the hub is shot (wheel or adapter). Unless the (adapter) hubs
are almost new, it's a good idea to replace the hubs when you
get new wheels. If the hub splines are worn, this allows the
wheel to "ratchet," causing premature wear and (potentially) much
grief.
Wire wheels are a PITA, but, boy, do they look good ;)
bs
--
***************************************************************
Bob Spidell San Jose, CA bspidell@comcast.net
'67 Austin-Healey 3000 '56 Austin-Healey 100M
***************************************************************
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Dick Matson" <MedLabInc@msn.com>
> Hi Don:
>
> In your reply, what part of the hub should be rounded on both edges - not
> sharp ?
>
> DM / Bj8
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