I can't remember if I "scaled" it, but when I went from a 7.25 rear to the 8.75 rear (9" to 10.25), the drum weight was definitely noticeable by feel/hand. Seemed like about a pound or more each.Anybody know the difference in weight between a 9" drum spindle and a 10" drum spindle? Thinking of switching my front brake setup, but it requires a 10" drum spindle.
Thanks. I am.Unless you are in super competitive, heads up racing, it's irrelevant.
wilwood race brakes are very light weight and call for a 9 inch drum brake spindle. Strange race brakes call for a 73 up disc brake spindle. Much heavier spindle but stronger for landing.Anybody know the difference in weight between a 9" drum spindle and a 10" drum spindle? Thinking of switching my front brake setup, but it requires a 10" drum spindle.
Are they that weak? I can't say i've ever seen a spindle break. I ran them for years, on the street, on my big block car.Your taking your life in your hands with stupid weak *** 9” drum spindles. I wouldn’t run them on a stock street car.
I would sacrifice the weight for the additional strength of the 10" parts.Unless you are in super competitive, heads up racing, it's irrelevant
Are they that weak? I can't say i've ever seen a spindle break. I ran them for years, on the street, on my big block car.
He is using it in a race only application, which definitely changes things.
Is there enough meat to drill out the holes in the lower ball joint to 5/8?
So as not to derail this thread, I would love to see a separate thread on this car. I've got a '67 body shell I'm wanting to start this type of operation on.On the valiant we went with a straight axle. Now that was a true weight reduction.
Shouldn't be long , We just moved the machine shop to a new location. The valiant is in the big building resting next to the Dump truck , excavator and heavy equipment. He is trying to get caught up on engine work to pay some bills.So as not to derail this thread, I would love to see a separate thread on this car. I've got a '67 body shell I'm wanting to start this type of operation on.
I remember this now..The bigger issue is the lower ball joint bolts. The drum spindles used 1/2" bolts there. The KH disks used 9/16", and the later 73+ 10" drum spindles and 73+ disk spindles used 5/8" bolts.
The other major difference is the diameter of the outer wheel bearing. I believe even the 10" drum spindles use a larger outer wheel bearing than the 9" drums, and the 73+ spindles use a larger one than the 67-72 10" drums. The higher the speed you run at the more that small outer bearing can be an issue.
And on that note, just weighing the spindle wouldn't be enough, you'd need to include the lower ball joints and hardware to fully capture the weight change if you're counting ounces.
Yes, RMS did this to mine.Is there enough meat to drill out the holes in the lower ball joint to 5/8?
but what about the 10"????Thanks to Rat Rod Al, 9" drum spindle is 5lbs 14oz