Rims won't come off

Mitsubishi Delica L400 production commenced in 1994 -- After much anticipation, the L400 arrived on Canadian Soil in 2009!
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claude
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Re: Rims won't come off

Post by claude »

jfarsang wrote:a sledge hammer and 2x4 is the only safe solution. You wack the rubber, not the rim.

all the rest have the possibility to cause damage
Sledge hammer and 2x4 did the trick. I had to do All four tires.
thanks everyone :-D
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thedjjack
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Re: Rims won't come off

Post by thedjjack »

I have bent a rim with a 2X4 only, it took a torch got it off for me (friends car steel hub centric rim seized on to the hub).

Happy to hear you got it off.

Put "nobind" (anti-seize) or paint to prevent it from happening again.
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jessef
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Re: Rims won't come off

Post by jessef »

for reference, Mitsubishi's are not hub centric.
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Re: Rims won't come off

Post by Feds »

92pajero wrote:If anyone suggest loosening lug nuts and going for a short drive, loosening and dropping the jack and that sort do not understand how a rim really works in supporting the vehicles weight. The lug nuts only retain the rim onto the axle or hub, the center opening of the rim is coincidentally the exact size for the axle or hub. Reason being the rim supports the majority of the load on this, the lugs/lug nuts only keep the wheel tightly fixed to the hub/axle.
I can't disagree with this more. Once the lug nuts are properly tightened, the vertical load is supported by the friction between the wheel and the drum/disc. At least with clean/non- rusty parts.

If the fit were tight enough to support the load right on the hub, you wouldn't be able to get the wheel on or off. That the wheel goes on and off freely means that there is clearance between the hub and the wheel. Thus, in order for the hub to take load, the wheel would have to move relative to the hub, and it would have to be continuously moving as the wheel rotates. It wouldn't be long before friction would heat the metal enough to cause failure, or fatigue would snap your lugs.

The -centric suffix after "hub" or "lug" refers to the centering of the wheel on installation. With lug-centric wheels, you have to be diligent about incremental tightening to make sure the wheel centres properly. Hub-centric, you can be less careful. Once the wheel is tightened, it should not move relative to the hub regardless of the clearance at the hub.

Here's a good illustration: http://www.miata.net/garage/hubcentric.html

The shiny bits on the disc are what is carrying the vertical and torsional wheel load. The lugs resist the side-to-side load from cornering (<-- gross simplification, as wheel offset, alignment, etc. will induce a bending load on the wheel even when stopped).
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