Jump to content
HybridZ

Removing studs from AL hubs...


Recommended Posts

I bought Austin's old brake system and it used stock wheel studs. I want to use wheel spacers so these have got to go. I am a bit worried about how I should get the studs out, since they are pressed in and the hub/rotor hat is one big piece of aluminum. If they were steel I would just knock them out with a 2 lb sledge. Maybe I should do the same here, but AL hubs are a new one to me so I thought I'd run it past everyone first.

 

The issue I think is that the rotor hat part is fairly thin. My first thought is to bolt the rotor on and then press the stud out with my hydraulic press. I'm just worried that I might bend something. I suppose the other option is to mount the hub on a spindle so the BEARINGS take the hit and then pound them out with a sledge...

 

Here are some pictures:

 

IMG_0224.jpg

 

IMG_0225.jpg

 

IMG_0226.jpg

 

IMG_0227.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Definitely support it right around the stud head when you are pressing. Assuming the back side of the stud flange is flat, use a steel plate with a notch in it on the press deck.

 

I would also heat the hub a little bit with a hair dryer, or heat gun on low or medium heat.

 

I attached a render of the plate I would use. Slip it in between the flanges and line the stud with the notch.

part1_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Might try throwing the whole unit in the oven or put it near a space heater etc. Get it up to 200-300*F. I don't think this is enough heat to damage/distort the aluminum. Please chime in if I'm wrong. Use a good set of welding gloves and use a large deep socket to support the back of the stud hole. A good hit with a mediumish ball peen hammer should knock the stud right out. Heating the the Alum. should make the studs come out easier, less chance of breaking something or screwing up the holes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And if the back of the flange is very un-flat?

 

 

You just might have enough room to slip some sections of tube up through the access holes. Cut the top of the tubes at an angle to match the back of the flange. Then stand it up on the tube and press the stud right down into the tube. Also, things tend to press pretty softly into aluminum, so it might take less force than you think to push the studs out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

From what Austin tells me he bought them from someone else who paid $600 to have Coleman machine make them. They are custom and are machined from one solid billet of aluminum. The hat fits a 8 x 7.625 rotor and I'll be using a 12.2 x .81.

 

I was going to use them as Austin sold them to me, but then I figured out that I can use Wilwood calipers instead of the single piston PBRs that Austin was using. Austin had measured the weight of the hub and rotor combo at 12 lbs a couple years ago and that stunned me at the time, which is why I jumped on them when he said he was going to an AZC setup. That's lighter than the rotors I had for my JSK setup, and then you have to figure the weight of a 280Z hub on top of that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How much do those bad boys weigh??

Looks like the hub weighs about 4 lbs according to the bathroom scale. I can tell you that the rotor that goes on it weighs 9.2 lbs according to Wilwood and I think Austin had said the rotor and hub weighed 12.x lbs, so my bathroom scale is probably just not accurate enough to get a good measurement.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heating the hubs is a good way of going, but I'd figure a way to chill the studs before I knocked them out. Some dry ice on the head or something like that. You could place and old socket or piece of steel tube over the studs to act as a shield and heat the area around the stud with a small torch then tap it out as well.

Just an idea.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also, things tend to press pretty softly into aluminum, so it might take less force than you think to push the studs out.

With no personal experience whatsoever, this sentence seemed like it would be true to me, and it was. I took my hubs and studs out to the shop and just threw a hub in the press and pushed on the stud. with a SHORT handle only about 5" long and not pushing very hard I was able to push the studs out. New studs went in fine and held when I used an impact to pull them into the hub. I guess I was being overly cautious.

 

Thanks guys for the ideas.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...