Specificly ford wide 5 hubs, i've seen it done with aftermarket sprint car hubs i even have a pair, but i want something with smaller bearings for the front, and all the sprint car stuff is for 3/4 ton rear axle bearings
I have one set of aftermarket Quickchange wide 5 hubs with buick drums mounted to them, pretty much the whole center of the buicks is cut out, but in the center where the bearings are is WAY to massive to be run on the front(Think 3/4 ton truck), they did on some dirt cars, i even have the modified spindles to do it, but i'm doing a street T roadster I'm looking at some wide 5 drums i have at home and i dont see any reason i cant press the studs out and press buick drums from the outside other than it may take too much machining to get it to seat flat and weaken one or the other I was kinda hoping someone would come on here and say they used to do it for dirt cars back in the '60s
On the thread "Wide Five Help. Adapting front and rear." on page 2 at the very bottom there is a picture of what I think you are talking about.
They were used on dirt trackers,,have a pair of old ones converted to wide 5 ,,there are also some that are more "covers than actual working brakes
Those are the same ones as in the thread I posted. I have the dirt track ones on mine. Here's a crappy cell pic.
Thats it!! And 26T arent those 3/4 ton style franklands?? I have a pair with a cracked lining at home, What is the brake hardware supposed to be for them??
Never seen that done before - liking it a lot. In the pic above - I reckon that skeleton backplate is upside down - or is it supposed to be like that?
Yes they are.The hardware was hard as hell to find. I finally found a set of pads on ebay advertised as NOS frankland drums after trying to adapt several other kinds. I still had to machine the drum to fit. The cylinders are chevy truck. Backing plates are original skeleton plates for racing. Spindles are ford with snouts welded on.
Upside down because of the dropped axle. It means shorter brake lines. I get a lot of shit for upside down plates. I think I'll flip them.
Hmm, the snouts are bolted on on mine, they welded a spacer plate to the spindle to take away the step and bolted right through the backing plate/grease cup. How about springs and such, do you have a better photo? So they are frankland only shoes?? I tried 51 ford truck and they aint even close, i was going to try '41 truck. I have a bare set of those backing plates i'm thinking of putting on my rear
My rears are bolted. My rear end is weird, it's a banjo with bolt on spindles and full floating axles. I will get some better pics for you. It will be easy to understand. I have some chevy shoes that are close and would fit with some modifications. I'll get the numbers.
Probably at one time took a hit in a race,was common to just cut off the end then just put on the bolt on piece.
Thats cool on the wide 5 front drum, I'm running a vintage "CAE" quick change on my 30' chrysler project and it has the buick drums/wide 5 set-up. From what I researched, 1936-46? Ford truck 1, 2 ton axles/hubs/brakes should work? floating hubs/axles the same. I needed a hub for the driver side on mine, went to the local junkyard and had them cut the end off the axle of a 46' truck for the hub and it was the same as what I had on mine. I'm running a 1939 spring in the front, front axle/wide 5's in the front also to keep the wide 5's all around. I think with the buick front & rear finned drums would look way cool!
Franklinds w/wide 5 used buick brake shoes, and spider mounting plates. I have a NOS complete setup for my speedster project. Front uses bolt on /weld on snout. I have NoS shoes for demintion if needed.Cal I need 1 90 fin Franklind drum???
it's was all common oval track equipment some had screw-on adpters that went over stock ford spindles to use 3/4 ton full floating hubs with a wide 5 bolt pattern which is still use with disc brakes. try winters quick change or your local oval track supplier or bicknell racing products.
From what I've heard they took drum where the liner was maxed,,remover the liner then fit it over the drum,,those were the homemade fakes ( or the traditional ) way to do it