The present invention relates to a tool for removing centre-lock wheels (also known as center-lock wheels).
The wheels of a vehicle need to be removable to allow for servicing and repair tasks to be carried out, especially in relation to the vehicle braking system, and for replacement of the vehicle tyres. Such replacement is necessary from time to time due to wear, or in order to substitute different tyres with different properties such as winter/summer tyres or road/track tyres. Most road cars and vans use a five-or four-bolt system in which the wheel hub has threaded sockets distributed evenly in a pentagonal or square pattern around the facing surface against which the wheel is held; a set of wheel bolts pass through corresponding apertures in the wheel and are secured in the sockets. In some vehicles, the hub is provided with externally-threaded studs onto which the wheel is fitted, and wheel nuts are fixed onto the studs in order to retain the wheel in place.
This is a straightforward and generally-reliable approach. However, it requires a reasonable radial distance from the centre of the wheel to be set aside for the fixing mechanism, which limits the potential dimensions of the brake discs. Centre-lock wheels have a long history in a motorsport context since they can be removed and attached more quickly during pit stops as only one fixing needs to be operated per wheel, they allow hub designs with more space for large brake discs, and have greater strength when properly installed. Some automobile manufacturers and tuners therefore install centre-lock wheel and hub systems on road-going sports and performance cars in order to secure these advantages. Centre-lock wheels are in current usage by manufacturers such as Porsche, Koenigsegg and Lamborghini.
Centre-lock wheels employ a single nut per wheel that has a threaded engagement with the wheel hub at the centre of the wheel. Whilst referred to as a ‘nut’, it may be externally-threaded for engagement with an internal thread provided on the wheel hub, but the morphology of the element in question usually leads to it being described as a ‘nut’ and this usage will be employed herein. The obviously-apparent difficulty with a centre-lock wheel is of course that the wheel itself is rotating around the same axis as that of the nut which is retaining the wheel in place, and therefore there is a risk that the rotational motion of the wheel will unwind the nut leading to loss of the wheel.
Such a loss would be catastrophic. Precautions are therefore taken to ensure that this does not take place. A simple and straightforward precaution is to arrange that rotation of the wheel in a forward direction will tend to tighten rather than loosen the nut. This requires that one side of the vehicle has a conventional clockwise-tightening thread and the other side has a reverse or anticlockwise thread. It is also common for the hub to have an interlocking engagement mechanism of some sort between the wheel and the hub so that torque is not transmitted directly via the nut. Older race cars used a spline on the axle over which the wheel fitted, engaging via a corresponding spline on the interior of the wheel. Current Porsche sports cars provide protruding lugs on the wheel hub which project into corresponding recesses on the wheel.
Principally, however, modern centre-lock arrangements for road vehicles employ an externally-splined locking pin which bridges the nut and hub and engages with an internal spline on both so as to prevent relative rotation. The locking pin may have a single spline matching both the hub and the nut, or it may have a step between two splines, one that fits the hub and one that fits the nut. This is inserted into position after the wheel has been fitted and the nut has been torqued, and prevents relative rotation. To remove the wheel, the locking pin must be extracted so that the nut can be removed.
Porsche employ a spring-loaded retracting locking pin that forms part of the wheel hub, which is depressed into the hub by a special protrusion on a bespoke socket that fits the centre-lock nut; removal of the socket from the nut allows the locking pin to extend under its spring bias until it is in place with its spline bridging the nut and the hub; a mechanic must visually check that it has extended satisfactorily. Other centre-lock arrangements employ a pin which is inserted from the outside through the nut and into the wheel hub along the centre-line of both, engaging with both sets of splines. It can then be held in by friction or by a snap-fit cap.
Such an externally-inserted pin will need to be removed prior to loosening the wheel nut. However, it is ideally a tight fit, so as to prevent accidental ejection, and there may have been a small movement of the nut relative to the wheel hub leading to the locking pin being even more tightly engaged. Thus, a removal tool is usually provided, comprising an adaptor which can be screwed into the locking pin and which provides an adequate securing point for a slide hammer to enable removal of the locking pin.
A slide hammer is a very unsatisfactory way of removing the locking pin. It applies a shock load, which is inherently undesirable. It is physically large, noisy, heavy and requires significant physical exertion to operate. Furthermore, slide hammers cannot be easily transported, and cannot be included onboard the vehicle as they occupy too much space and impose too great a weight penalty. In some scenarios this could lead to a vehicle with a defective or damaged tyre requiring recovery to a specialist repairer, causing inconvenience to the end user where a roadside repair may have been possible.
The present invention therefore proposes to remove the locking element from a centre-lock wheel hub with a wheel nut threadingly engaged with the wheel hub, where the locking element engages with the wheel hub and with the wheel nut thereby to prevent relative rotation of the wheel hub and the wheel nut, by fitting an extraction apparatus having a first end with an externally threaded section, threadingly engaged with a corresponding internal thread of the locking element, a second end provided with an engagement element for imparting rotational torque to the extraction apparatus, and a bearing surface, located radially outside the externally threaded section and axially displaced from the externally threaded section, contacting the wheel nut.
Once this assembly has been completed by fitting the extraction apparatus to the locking element in the manner defined, the extraction apparatus can be rotated via the engagement element, thus drawing the locking element onto the threaded engagement. The extraction apparatus will be prevented from being drawn inwards as soon as the bearing surface comes into contact with the wheel nut. Thus, the locking element will be steadily withdrawn from the hub in a controlled manner.
The locking element typically comprises at least one spline corresponding to a spline on the wheel hub and/or the wheel nut. Often, there is a spline to engage with the wheel hub and a separate spline to engage with the wheel nut.
We prefer that the axial extent of the threaded engagement between the extraction tool and the locking element is at least as long as the axial extent of the engagement between the locking element and the wheel hub and/or the wheel nut. This ensures that the locking element can be completely removed.
The bearing face contacting the wheel nut can comprise an axially-concentric circular trench, into which an outer edge of the wheel nut is able to project. This provides a secure location for the bearing face. It is preferably located axially between the externally threaded section and the engagement element.
There will of course usually be a wheel mounted on the wheel hub, retained in place by at least the wheel nut.
Removal will be easier if the engagement element projects axially outwardly of the wheel nut; a wider variety of tools will then conveniently engage with the engagement element.
The extraction apparatus is preferably provided as two parts, an extraction tool on which the externally threaded section and the engagement element are provided, and a spacer tool on which the bearing surface is provided. The spacer tool can be an annular element of suitable dimensions.
The engagement element is preferably a recess having limited rotational symmetry, such as a square cross-section.
The present invention also relates to an extraction apparatus for a locking element of a centre-lock wheel hub assembly, having a first end with an externally threaded section, for engagement with a corresponding internal thread of the locking element, a second end provided with an engagement element for imparting rotational torque to the apparatus, a bearing surface for contacting the wheel nut, located radially outside the externally threaded section and axially displaced from the externally threaded section
Finally, the invention provides a method of removing a wheel from a centre-lock wheel hub assembly, the hub assembly comprising a wheel nut threadingly engaged with the wheel hub and a locking element engaging with the wheel hub and with the wheel nut thereby to prevent relative rotation of the wheel hub and the wheel nut, the method comprising the steps of providing an extraction tool that is threadingly engagable with the locking element, providing a spacer tool having a bearing face for contacting the wheel nut and a bearing face for contacting the extraction tool thereby to maintain a minimum axial distance between them, threadingly engaging the extraction tool with the locking element with the spacer tool positioned between the wheel nut and the extraction tool, rotating the extraction tool thereby to continue threading engagement with the locking element and hence relative axial translation of the locking element and the extraction tool.
An embodiment of the present invention will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying figures in which;
This structure lends itself to a straightforward set of reference axes. In the following, an “axial” direction is one that is in line with the axis of rotation of the wheel 10 on the hub 24. The “in” and “out” directions along that axis are towards the centreline of the vehicle and away from the centreline of the vehicle, respectively.
The stub axle 32 is in the form of a hollow cylindrical projection from the rotatable part 38 of the hub 24. An end portion of the stub axle is externally-threaded 32a so as to accept the wheelnut 26 which has a corresponding internal thread. Also visible in
It then remains to find a way to remove the locking pin 42 when it becomes necessary to remove the wheel 10 (and hence the wheelnut 26). To enable this, we provide a spacer tool 46, shown in
Instead of removing the locking pin 42 via a shock loading imparted via a slide hammer,
The engagement tool 50 extends into the central axis of the locking pin 42 and has an external thread 54 which has just about engaged with an internal thread 56 on an inner cylindrical surface of the locking pin 42. Towards the outer part of the engagement tool 50, the tool widens including a step 58 which defines a bearing surface, behind with is sandwiched the spacer tool 46.
As noted above, the spacer tool 46 is in the form of a disc having an inner bearing surface 60 which contacts the outer extremity of the wheelnut 26 and an outer bearing surface 62 which contacts the step 58. With the thread 54 of the engagement tool 50 satisfactorily but not fully engaged, the spacer tool 46 is snugly sandwiched in place. To achieve this, the spacer tool is dimensioned appropriately in the light of the dimensions of the other elements illustrated in
Once in this configuration, a source of torque can be connected to the engagement element 52 of the engagement tool 50, such as a ratchet spanner, breaker bar, air gun or the like. Rotation of the engagement tool 50 then further engages its thread 54 with the thread 56 of the locking pin 42. Since the engagement tool 50 cannot be drawn further into the assembly, due to the presence of the spacer tool 46 abutting against the wheelnut 26 and the step 58, the locking pin 42 must instead be withdrawn from the stub axle 32 and wheelnut 26.
Importantly, the locking pin 42 is removed in the way by a steady draw created by the threaded engagement with the engagement tool 50. The degree of leverage involved can be tailored as desired by setting pitch of the thread employed. Sudden shock loads are avoided entirely.
Another benefit of this invention is that a simple, inexpensive and lightweight spacer tool 46 can be provided that enables a standard engagement tool 50 to be employed within the process, simply by selecting the dimensions of the spacer tool as required in the light of the dimensions of a standard engagement tool 50 and the other elements of the wheel hub, nut etc. Such engagement tools are provided to workshops and recovery staff, and may be incorporated within the toolkit provided in the vehicle. The spacer tool is small enough and light enough to be provided in the vehicle toolkit and will therefore always be available should the vehicle become stranded with a damaged tyre, for example.
The spacer tool 46 could be provided in the manner shown, i.e. a separate disc which cooperates with the engagement tool 50. Alternatively, the spacer tool 46 could be retained on the engagement tool 50 as a permanent or semi-permanent part thereof. Such a combined spacer tool and engagement tool could be an integral body, or the spacer tool could be freely rotatable around the engagement tool. We generally prefer the latter, since this allows the spacer tool to remain still relative to the wheelnut and thus prevent wear or similar damage to the wheelnut.
The inner bearing surface 60 is defined in the form of a circumferential recess in order to allow the spacer tool 46 to rest snugly against the outermost tip of the wheelnut 26, with the spacer tool 46 locating itself accurately on the wheel hub axis when the tip of the wheelnut 26 fits into the circumferential recess. To assist with this positive location, the radially inner edge of the recess is defined by an upstanding ridge 68 extending circumferentially around the disc, which can (in use) fit snugly within the wheelnut 26.
The inner bearing surface 60 and outer bearing surface 62 are spaced apart axially by a distance which is small enough to allow the respective threads of the locking pin 42 and the engagement tool 50 to engage but large enough to allow the locking pin 42 to be fully withdrawn.
In the portion of the disc lying radially between the inner bearing surface 60 and the outer bearing surface 62, a plurality of weight-saving through-holes are provided. These are circumferentially spaced and sized to leave behind sufficient material to lend adequate strength to the spacer tool 46 while eliminating as much weight as possible. This assists with allowing the spacer tool 46 to be carried in the toolkit of a lightweight sports car.
It will of course be understood that many variations may be made to the above-described embodiment without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2116025.4 | Nov 2021 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2022/081006 | 11/7/2022 | WO |