I had to swap a bad rear spindle on my car and I noticed the new one didn't have a provision the old one did. I called Steve and stumped him good.
The old one has a threaded hole for a left-hand-thread bolt. That holds on a stamped metal cap that fits on the spindle nut. I'm assuming the idea is that if the rotation of the wheel starts backing off the spindle nut the cap will rotate against the small bolt, thereby tightening it and keeping the whole works in place. It's kind of like how Dodge used to use left-hand-thread lug nuts on one side of their cars. Both of them figured out that it's wasted effort.
That is a fail safe. Alot of the after market drums and bearings are mad by four year old indoneasian kids so the machining isnt spot on. The ring of snappage tends to com out the poorly machined slot. This cap a extra insurance thingy.
focinite wrote:That is a fail safe. Alot of the after market drums and bearings are mad by four year old indoneasian kids so the machining isnt spot on. The ring of snappage tends to com out the poorly machined slot. This cap a extra insurance thingy.