The motor/hub mounts off center ...the controller side is wider the other side is closer ... The rim/tire is directly above the motor/hub assy ..so it's naturally off center ..this was bought in 2019 ... I looked into it then and assumed they were all like this ... Just recently I have been asking if the problem has been solved and I could buy me 4th one to get one that's centered ... Golden Motors so far has not been able to tell me if it's "fixed" .....
Do the new motors come with the rim laced off center to make up for the motor/hub being off center from the controller ? I can't seem to get thru to Golden Motors about this question ...Either I or they don't understand ..
Thanks Again for your help ... Wonder how many people you've helped ...Don
Hi Don,
I previously said there were three possible causes:
Your MP5 should not have the offset rim problem, so there are three possible causes:
- Your wheel has not been fitted in the correct upright position and is tilted slightly to one side. The wheel will need to be refitted into the fork dropouts making sure it is in a perfectly upright position.
- The hub has more spacer washers (or Torque arms etc.) on one side than the other.
- The spokes were not originally fitted with the rim perfectly centred and will need to be adjusted to bring the rim into the correct central position.
However, another possible cause might be that the fork legs have somehow been bent sideways.
If your rim is incorrectly centred between the motor ring flanges , I believe it will be the third option from the three I previously mentioned:
The spokes were not originally fitted with the rim perfectly centred and will need to be adjusted to bring the rim into the correct central position.Unfortunately, I don't know how or why this has happened, but it must have occurred when the wheel was assembled, but I don't believe that it would have been done intentionally.
I suspect it may be due to incorrect loading of the hub into an automatic wheel building machine resulting the incorrect offset
(or the correct offset but in the wrong direction) or perhaps the wheel has simply been laced manually by hand without the use of a rim centring jig.
However, I'm still pretty sure that it will be possible to centre it correctly on your forks, purely by adjusting the spokes, assuming that your fork legs are not misaligned
(i.e. both of the fork legs have not been pushed sideways in the same direction).
Did you watch
this video showing how to adjust wheel dish that Tommycat posted a link to in
this post?
If you want to check if your forks have been pushed sideways, simply reverse the wheel in the forks. If the fork dropouts are offset, the rim offset should remain the same (and in the same direction).
Check out
this YouTube video for more useful information regarding fork alignment checks.
If my suspicions are correct, the rim offset would be transferred to the opposite fork leg, confirming that the incorrect dishing of the wheel is causing the offset rim, not the forks.
After carefully studying your pictures, I noticed that you don't have any axle washers inside the dropouts.
Axle washers must be fitted inside the fork dropouts to prevent the axle from damaging the dropouts.
The washers should be fitted similar to the rear motor installation shown below:
If you don't have sufficient axle length to install axle washer on both sides of the dropouts, the "C" washers and the torque arms and nuts etc., I suggest that you put the tabbed washers on the inside of the dropouts and just use the torque arms on the outside of the lawyers lip "C" washers instead.
On my Smart Pie front wheel installation, I fitted the torque washers on the inside of the dropouts:
I also hammered over the tabs on the tabbed torque washers so that they were properly located within the dropouts
(making them functional) as shown in the above photo.
AlanP.S. I don't know how many people I've helped, I just try to help as many as I can.