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Re: Why Won't this Work?--Brake Drums

To: "tom felts" <tomfelts@earthlink.net>, healeys@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Why Won't this Work?--Brake Drums
From: Bruce Hurley <bhurley@cyberia.com>
Date: Tue, 06 Dec 2005 18:21:45 -0500
Tom, there may be one other thing you want to check on your hubs. I had one 
set balanced years ago and it definitely helped, however with the car on 
jack stands I still noticed the hubs still ran out. I measured the distance 
from each lug hole to the edge of the rim and realized  that the hub was 
machined off center.

The fix was to give an old hub for the machinist to hold in the lathe. He 
then took turned both the inside and outside so that the drum would be 
concentric with the hub. After this I didn't expect them to take much 
weight to balance, but they did. We tapped pieces of scrap steel and 
screwed them on.

My car still had a little shake, until all earlier threads convinced me to 
put on new tires. My car is shake free now.

Hope this is clear.

Bruce
1963 BJ7
1968 MGB







At 12:16 PM 12/6/2005 -0500, tom felts wrote:
>I've been told the brake drums on our Healeys are generally out of balance
>and contribute to scuttle shake.  So I decided I'd send mine off to be
>balanced.  Before I did that I thought it would be a good idea to see how
>badly out of balance they were.  But--how to do that?
>
>So,  I called around and got what I thought was a great suggestion.  Take
>it to a wheel balancing place and have it spin balanced.  I went to a
>trusted person, and, using cones were able to get it lined up on the
>spinner.
>
>Using the static balance function, one side was 1.25 off and the other 2.50
>off.  So now I know they ARE out of balance.
>
>He suggested I "mold" a correct weight lead weight to the contour of the
>drum and, using JB Weld, attach it to the drum.  He marked the spot where
>it should go.
>
>What do you think-----will it work?
>
>TIA
>tom




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