Hulloo!!
Posting here looking for some help from suitably minded folks.
My plans to fix my old c.1910 tradesman's tricycle have hit a brick wall and I'm hoping there may be some brains/experience that can help!
The drum brakes are worn and apply/release inconsistently which throws 'The Beast' into an impossible-to-control series of ever-increasing slews. As a result I've sadly not ridden it for several years... but yesterday I cleared the garage out so as this morning I could start taking it apart to get the drums repaired. Several hours later the mudguards are off and the brake rods are disconnected, (... Yep, it took that long to undo all the paint-covered nuts, bolts and screws!!).
I then removed the bolt, with a flattened shaft, that I thought simply secured the rear of the hub/axle assembly into the frame. However, the axle/hub assembly won't budge. I've hit it from the rear with a punch and hammer, repeatedly, as hard as I dare, but it won't move. It may be that I'm mistaken in how I'm interpreting the parts? It may be that something else is securing it in place? (For example I might also have to undo the big nut on the axle on the outer end of the axle).
The following photos hopefully help illustrate the set-up. I can't see any other nuts or screws other than the two nuts that are shown in the photos. These are the nut that connects the brake rod assembly, (it won't turn, and when I put it under pressure it snapped the return spring inside the drum brake so now the brake won't release!)... and then there's the 'hub nut' on the wheel's outer (this nut rotates with the wheel, whereas the inner end of the 'axle', the part I've been hitting with a hammer to release it from the frame, doesn't rotate when the wheel rotates).
I appreciate the set up of this lovely old tricycle isn't 'normal'... but I'm hoping someone might be mechanically minded, or have seen this arrangement before, and be able to give me some pointers as to what to do next to get the wheels safely off so as I can get to the drum brakes.
Fingers crossed... and thanks for reading!
Posting here looking for some help from suitably minded folks.
My plans to fix my old c.1910 tradesman's tricycle have hit a brick wall and I'm hoping there may be some brains/experience that can help!
The drum brakes are worn and apply/release inconsistently which throws 'The Beast' into an impossible-to-control series of ever-increasing slews. As a result I've sadly not ridden it for several years... but yesterday I cleared the garage out so as this morning I could start taking it apart to get the drums repaired. Several hours later the mudguards are off and the brake rods are disconnected, (... Yep, it took that long to undo all the paint-covered nuts, bolts and screws!!).
I then removed the bolt, with a flattened shaft, that I thought simply secured the rear of the hub/axle assembly into the frame. However, the axle/hub assembly won't budge. I've hit it from the rear with a punch and hammer, repeatedly, as hard as I dare, but it won't move. It may be that I'm mistaken in how I'm interpreting the parts? It may be that something else is securing it in place? (For example I might also have to undo the big nut on the axle on the outer end of the axle).
The following photos hopefully help illustrate the set-up. I can't see any other nuts or screws other than the two nuts that are shown in the photos. These are the nut that connects the brake rod assembly, (it won't turn, and when I put it under pressure it snapped the return spring inside the drum brake so now the brake won't release!)... and then there's the 'hub nut' on the wheel's outer (this nut rotates with the wheel, whereas the inner end of the 'axle', the part I've been hitting with a hammer to release it from the frame, doesn't rotate when the wheel rotates).
I appreciate the set up of this lovely old tricycle isn't 'normal'... but I'm hoping someone might be mechanically minded, or have seen this arrangement before, and be able to give me some pointers as to what to do next to get the wheels safely off so as I can get to the drum brakes.
Fingers crossed... and thanks for reading!