Oh here I am again, I'm all over this forum right now lol.
What's confusing me is this stock rear axle nut on an 18 speed Huffy mountain bike, opposite the original chain side.
Typically what I'm familiar with is a square metal piece that acts as a washer, that goes under this nut and has a small lobe sticking out, that tucks into the frame. This keeps the wheel from ever shifting out of place. At least I've seen these on other bikes.
Well look at this. The factory wheel has just a plain nut, no lock washer or anything under it.... and what's worse a long open axle slot that allows the axle to shift all over the place in position. Why would they do this, or such a design even be needed? It makes no sense at all to me.
I'm thinking well, the torque of the motorized bike chain is going to be pulling on this spot big time, so won't that keep knocking it out of alignment? But I hesitate to change things because its what the manufacturer designed/put in.
The nut itself appears to be a bit of a lock nut of sorts. Is this good enough?
What's confusing me is this stock rear axle nut on an 18 speed Huffy mountain bike, opposite the original chain side.
Typically what I'm familiar with is a square metal piece that acts as a washer, that goes under this nut and has a small lobe sticking out, that tucks into the frame. This keeps the wheel from ever shifting out of place. At least I've seen these on other bikes.
Well look at this. The factory wheel has just a plain nut, no lock washer or anything under it.... and what's worse a long open axle slot that allows the axle to shift all over the place in position. Why would they do this, or such a design even be needed? It makes no sense at all to me.
I'm thinking well, the torque of the motorized bike chain is going to be pulling on this spot big time, so won't that keep knocking it out of alignment? But I hesitate to change things because its what the manufacturer designed/put in.
The nut itself appears to be a bit of a lock nut of sorts. Is this good enough?
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