Friday, Jun 14, 2019 at 00:45
Splits, the manufacturers do testing on wheels and hubs and studs, but with basic designs.
Then comes variations on the design - such as alloy wheels, with longer studs, and wider track - then aftermarket wheels, with additional variations of offset and centre hub design.
Then owners put heavy trays and canopies on, and extended trays. Then they load them up to maximum GVM - and then ask for increased GVM.
Then they drive them like there's no tomorrow - on roads that are heavily corrugated. It all gets a bit much for the original design.
The most concerning thing I see today is extended trays on dual cabs. Now, I know the vehicle design regulations say you can have up to 60% of a wheelbase length, in tray length, behind the rear axle.
But I've seen some horrifying-looking lengths of trays hanging out the behind the rear axle of dual-cab Landcruisers just recently - and I believe these setups need to be banned.
I've spotted several near-new dual cab Landcruisers sporting trays that looked to me, like they were around 2.2M long. That's an accident just waiting to happen, IMO.
It's obvious tray builders are taking the regulations to the maximum - but I believe those tray length regulations need to be seriously looked at in todays world, where dual cabs with long trays are proliferating.
IMO, many of these long trays are imposing serious weight loadings and side thrust on the rear axles of these dual cabs - to the extent that I'm personally of the opinion, that they're downright dangerous - as regards unstable handling when fully loaded, and as regards the excessive loads they're imposing on rear axles, rear wheels, and their wheel studs.
Hitch up a 'van or big trailer to these outfits, and the problems can only get worse.
Add in the narrow rear axle of the Landcruiser, and the side thrust loading on the rear axle, wheels and wheel studs, increases, as compared to a rear axle that is the same width as the front. It's a simple leverage problem.
More overhang, more problems related to poor handling when fully loaded, more swaying, more steering "twitchiness", and more back-and-
forth stresses on the rear axle.
Cheers, Ron.
FollowupID:
899882