What is inside a wheel hub?

22 Dec,2022

4.png

Hub internals will vary from wheel to wheel, with many brands having proprietary individual mechanisms, however some parts remain the same throughout.


The hub shell is the outermost part of the hub, where the spokes are laced in to connect the hub to the rim. The shell acts as the housing for the rest of the components.


The hub bearings will sit inside the shell, held in place either by cones and lock nuts or end caps that sit on the outside of the bearings.


Through the middle, there will be an axle. This will either be equipped to house a skewer, for a quick release wheel, or a hollow tube, called a through-axle.


Rear wheels have an additional element – the freehub. This is where the cassette fits onto and has its own individual bearings so that it can spin freely from the wheel itself and allows the rider to freewheel. To learn more, see our guide to bicycle freehubs.


Some manufacturers will use a cup-and-cone system for axle bearings and cartridge bearings for the freehub and vice versa, though neither typically allow for any freehub adjustability.


Contact us

Tel: 0731-84033856
Contact person: Manager Tan
Phone: 13207310455
Email: megemao@megebearing.com megetan@megebearing.com
Add: Maotang Industrial Park, Ansha town, Changsha City, Hunan Province

Follow us

手机端Mobile site

微信端WeChat

Copyright © 2018 - Changsha Mege Bearing Co., Ltd. - TECHNICAL SUPPORT: BEARING.CN
Send Inquiry