โNov-02-2017 03:49 AM
โNov-13-2017 06:36 AM
โNov-13-2017 06:35 AM
โNov-12-2017 10:04 PM
Grit dog wrote:fj12ryder wrote:wilber1 wrote:And probably 2 or 3 times as much mass moving out there too.
How do you know it isn't balanced? Even if it isn't, why would you add to your problems by adding another unbalanced component that could exaggerate any imbalance? There is more mass and a lot longer arm (radius) to a wheel and tire than a drum. The outside surface of a 235/80R16 ST tire is traveling over 2.5 times faster than the outside surface of a 12" drum.
You'll have trouble explaining the physics of that to some....as evidenced by some of the posts in this thread.
โNov-12-2017 09:10 PM
fj12ryder wrote:wilber1 wrote:And probably 2 or 3 times as much mass moving out there too.
How do you know it isn't balanced? Even if it isn't, why would you add to your problems by adding another unbalanced component that could exaggerate any imbalance? There is more mass and a lot longer arm (radius) to a wheel and tire than a drum. The outside surface of a 235/80R16 ST tire is traveling over 2.5 times faster than the outside surface of a 12" drum.
โNov-12-2017 03:35 PM
fj12ryder wrote:wilber1 wrote:And probably 2 or 3 times as much mass moving out there too.
How do you know it isn't balanced? Even if it isn't, why would you add to your problems by adding another unbalanced component that could exaggerate any imbalance? There is more mass and a lot longer arm (radius) to a wheel and tire than a drum. The outside surface of a 235/80R16 ST tire is traveling over 2.5 times faster than the outside surface of a 12" drum.
โNov-12-2017 03:13 PM
โNov-12-2017 03:01 PM
wilber1 wrote:And probably 2 or 3 times as much mass moving out there too.
How do you know it isn't balanced? Even if it isn't, why would you add to your problems by adding another unbalanced component that could exaggerate any imbalance? There is more mass and a lot longer arm (radius) to a wheel and tire than a drum. The outside surface of a 235/80R16 ST tire is traveling over 2.5 times faster than the outside surface of a 12" drum.
โNov-12-2017 02:27 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:wilber1 wrote:LarryJM wrote:wilber1 wrote:
If your TV will shake and vibrate from an unbalanced wheel, why would anyone think a trailer won't? Yes, back in the olden days when most cars had all drum brakes and solid rear axles, it was necessary to balance the wheels.
The tires on a TV especially the front are worlds different than a trailer. Just from the nature of the design with all the ball joints, bearings necessary for steering along with the entire steering mechanism which you actually hold onto via the steering wheel amplifies any NVH issues from out of balanced tire/wheel assemblies over a trailer that is a fixed rotating assembly with only a pair of bearings on the spindle.
It amazes me that anyone would even attempt to compare these two worlds apart situations .... they're not even in the apple and oranges category, but more in the grapes and watermellon realm.
Larry
It may not be as critical as in a steering system but do you not balance the rear wheels on your vehicles? A rotating mass that is out of balance will shake. It doesn't matter what it is. Just because you can't feel it in your TV doesn't mean it isn't there.
Why balance the tires/wheels if the rest of the assembly is not balanced?
โNov-12-2017 05:23 AM
Grit dog wrote:
^What on earth are you talking about? The rest of the "assembly." Like brake rotors?
Some are, some aren't. I've seen drums back in the old days that had balance weights on them and drilled rotors, but it's all about inertia. A brake rotor has only a very small fraction of the amount of inertia that a tire/wheel assembly has. I.E. A brake rotor could be 10x (for example) as out of balance as a tire before it has the same effect.
โNov-12-2017 02:22 AM
โNov-11-2017 11:59 PM
wilber1 wrote:LarryJM wrote:wilber1 wrote:
If your TV will shake and vibrate from an unbalanced wheel, why would anyone think a trailer won't? Yes, back in the olden days when most cars had all drum brakes and solid rear axles, it was necessary to balance the wheels.
The tires on a TV especially the front are worlds different than a trailer. Just from the nature of the design with all the ball joints, bearings necessary for steering along with the entire steering mechanism which you actually hold onto via the steering wheel amplifies any NVH issues from out of balanced tire/wheel assemblies over a trailer that is a fixed rotating assembly with only a pair of bearings on the spindle.
It amazes me that anyone would even attempt to compare these two worlds apart situations .... they're not even in the apple and oranges category, but more in the grapes and watermellon realm.
Larry
It may not be as critical as in a steering system but do you not balance the rear wheels on your vehicles? A rotating mass that is out of balance will shake. It doesn't matter what it is. Just because you can't feel it in your TV doesn't mean it isn't there.
โNov-11-2017 09:48 PM
โNov-11-2017 09:40 PM
โNov-11-2017 09:16 PM
wilber1 wrote:LarryJM wrote:wilber1 wrote:
If your TV will shake and vibrate from an unbalanced wheel, why would anyone think a trailer won't? Yes, back in the olden days when most cars had all drum brakes and solid rear axles, it was necessary to balance the wheels.
The tires on a TV especially the front are worlds different than a trailer. Just from the nature of the design with all the ball joints, bearings necessary for steering along with the entire steering mechanism which you actually hold onto via the steering wheel amplifies any NVH issues from out of balanced tire/wheel assemblies over a trailer that is a fixed rotating assembly with only a pair of bearings on the spindle.
It amazes me that anyone would even attempt to compare these two worlds apart situations .... they're not even in the apple and oranges category, but more in the grapes and watermellon realm.
Larry
It may not be as critical as in a steering system but do you not balance the rear wheels on your vehicles? A rotating mass that is out of balance will shake. It doesn't matter what it is. Just because you can't feel it in your TV doesn't mean it isn't there.