Re: [CR]old British hubs

(Example: Books:Ron Kitching)

From: "Pete Geurds" <raleighpro@dejazzd.com>
To: <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
References: <3CEB0B24-634B-4564-A724-6289767DC853@woodworkingboy.com> <df813d780602230327m67a8f683j@mail.gmail.com> <01b301c6398c$331ed0a0$2d01a8c0@bike1>
Subject: Re: [CR]old British hubs
Date: Fri, 24 Feb 2006 17:51:50 -0500
reply-type=response

From: "Steven Willis" <smwillis@verizon.net> Sent: Friday, February 24, 2006 4:49 PM Subject: [CR]old British hubs
>I just had a customer ask which side does the fixed cone on an old British
>front hub go on. I used to remember but age is getting the better of me.
>Thanks
> Steven Willis

Steve, If it's a Raleigh made hub the fixed cone goes on the right side of bike. Not sure that other manufacturers did this. see: http://sheldonbrown.com/english-3.html#raleigh
>From Sheldon's page: "Raleigh front hubs Most front wheels can be installed without regard for which side is left and which side is right. This is not the case with Raleigh 3-speeds. Raleigh front hubs usually don't have cone locknuts. Instead, they have one cone with wrench flats, the adjustable cone. The other cone is round, with no place for a wrench. The non-adjustable cone is supposed to screw down all the way on the axle until it runs out of threads (there is a raised shoulder on the axle for this purpose). All adjustments are to be made with the adjustable cone. The fixed cone must go on the bicycle's right, the adjustable cone must go on the bicycle's left. On the left side, the axle nut will keep the left cone from loosening up. If the wheel is accidentally reversed, so that the adjustable cone is on the right, it can tighten itself up and ruin the hub. Raleighs also used an unusual wheel retention feature. The axle slot in the front fork end is keyhole shaped. Older hubs came with special axle nuts and washers. The axle nut had a shoulder which fitted through the axle washer and into the round part of the axle slot. Later hubs have a shoulder on the cone which fits into the round part of the axle slot, and it is necessary to spread the fork blades a bit to get the wheel in or out. This is the more common arrangement."

Pete Geurds
Douglassville, Pa