Gordon Keeble help
Author
Discussion

drfoster1971

Original Poster:

7 posts

Friday 3rd April
quotequote all
Hi there, I have inherited chassis 80 and have been using it for a couple of years but now need to do more maintenance on it, and this seems like an ideal forum.
First question, likely to be off many, how do you remove the wheels? As I need to bleed the brakes.
Are the spinners real or fake as they seen to have wheel nuts on as well which look like they are staked over the studs.

Many thanks in advance

Steve

hidetheelephants

34,248 posts

217 months

Friday 3rd April
quotequote all
A photo would help, although if there are obvious wheelnuts then the spinner may well be a cosmetic thing. There's a long thread about GKs somewhere, at least one PHer owns one.

drfoster1971

Original Poster:

7 posts

Friday 3rd April
quotequote all
Cheers, I'm trying to work out how to attach photos! Doesn't seem straightforward lol

ARH

1,686 posts

263 months

Friday 3rd April
quotequote all
Just above the reply box click where it says upload an image

hidetheelephants

34,248 posts

217 months

hidetheelephants

34,248 posts

217 months

Huntsman

9,150 posts

274 months

Friday 3rd April
quotequote all
drfoster1971 said:
Hi there, I have inherited chassis 80 and have been using it for a couple of years but now need to do more maintenance on it, and this seems like an ideal forum.
First question, likely to be off many, how do you remove the wheels? As I need to bleed the brakes.
Are the spinners real or fake as they seen to have wheel nuts on as well which look like they are staked over the studs.

Many thanks in advance

Steve
Did you inherit from a family member in Gloucester?

I had #57, wheels are peg drive, so you undo the spinner, mine had JAP Magnas, yours might be different.

Contact the club.

drfoster1971

Original Poster:

7 posts

Saturday 4th April
quotequote all
ARH said:
Just above the reply box click where it says upload an image
I don't have that link...yet!

drfoster1971

Original Poster:

7 posts

Sunday 5th April
quotequote all
Finally image link appeared! Here you go

hidetheelephants

34,248 posts

217 months

Sunday 5th April
quotequote all
The spinner is holding the wheel on, the staked nuts hold the splined adaptor onto the wheel rim and are "not user serviceable".

drfoster1971

Original Poster:

7 posts

Monday 6th April
quotequote all
hidetheelephants said:
The spinner is holding the wheel on, the staked nuts hold the splined adaptor onto the wheel rim and are "not user serviceable".
nice one, just need to find a big hammer now to get it off!!

drfoster1971

Original Poster:

7 posts

Monday 6th April
quotequote all
Huntsman said:
Did you inherit from a family member in Gloucester?

I had #57, wheels are peg drive, so you undo the spinner, mine had JAP Magnas, yours might be different.

Contact the club.
hi there, no , we inherited it from my FiL. not sure what wheels these are, they look standard.

hidetheelephants

34,248 posts

217 months

Monday 6th April
quotequote all
They look vaguely like Dunlop alloys, but the dimpling around the vent holes suggests pressed steel rather than alloy. They could be peg drive or splined hubs, I don't know how to tell without removing the wheel.

V10Mike

609 posts

230 months

Tuesday 7th April
quotequote all
They're the standard MGA twin cam steel wheels. As said above, nuts hold the presser plate and are fixed to the drive pins. You need a hide mallet to avoid trashing the knock-offs.

niva441

2,100 posts

255 months

drfoster1971

Original Poster:

7 posts

Wednesday 8th April
quotequote all
V10Mike said:
They're the standard MGA twin cam steel wheels. As said above, nuts hold the presser plate and are fixed to the drive pins. You need a hide mallet to avoid trashing the knock-offs.
cool, cheers for the confirmation, i'll see if i can order one

hidetheelephants

34,248 posts

217 months

Wednesday 8th April
quotequote all
A deadblow mallet might be less onerous to use; here's a nice UK-made one.