I suspect that the question is about the upright, the hub itself is no big deal.marcush. wrote:Are we talking of the hub or the complete upright?
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Careful there is a trap. The hub is the part which connects the brake disc with the rim and in case of the rear hub the drive shaft. You could apply full engine torque while having full brake torque. The torque the hub experiences can then exceed the tire grip (tires on low grip surface, ice, for example). Therefore the forces on the rear hub are by no means limited by the tire grip.Just_a_fan wrote:The front hubs do carry larger braking forces though. Ultimately the torque that the hub has to carry is limited by the tyre's ability to grip.
Good catch. Though, if you apply enough brakes to lock the tires and then floor it, don't you deserve whatever happens to you?mep wrote:Careful there is a trap. The hub is the part which connects the brake disc with the rim and in case of the rear hub the drive shaft. You could apply full engine torque while having full brake torque. The torque the hub experiences can then exceed the tire grip (tires on low grip surface, ice, for example). Therefore the forces on the rear hub are by no means limited by the tire grip.Just_a_fan wrote:The front hubs do carry larger braking forces though. Ultimately the torque that the hub has to carry is limited by the tyre's ability to grip.
You could but that presumably isn't a design parameter rather a driver doing something totally stupid.mep wrote:Careful there is a trap. The hub is the part which connects the brake disc with the rim and in case of the rear hub the drive shaft. You could apply full engine torque while having full brake torque. The torque the hub experiences can then exceed the tire grip (tires on low grip surface, ice, for example). Therefore the forces on the rear hub are by no means limited by the tire grip.Just_a_fan wrote:The front hubs do carry larger braking forces though. Ultimately the torque that the hub has to carry is limited by the tyre's ability to grip.