As the title asked.
how to distinguish the two worlds?
this is a picture of peugeot 407.
which part is knuckle and which part is upright?
Are they exactly the same thing?hollowBallistix wrote:Well in work we machine the red component & we call it the "Knuckle"
But isn't an "Upright" & "Knuckle" the same thing ?
same understanding as me, we used to machine both the hubs & knuckles for the front suspension & also the carrier for the rearRacingManiac wrote:Hub seems kinda strange since I always refer to the part that the wheel attaches to as hubs, which gets installed onto the upright/knuckle.
For me spindle is a part that hub might get installed onto, and the spindle is attached to the upright(does not spin, hub spins on it), but you can have spindle-less hub.Tim.Wright wrote:Yes, Ive also heard that referred to as the hub too. It can also be referred to as a spindle or axle.
Tim
Interesting, it's "spindel" in swedish.Greg Locock wrote:I tend to call short uprights (UCA inside wheel) knuckles, and tall ones spindles. Doubtless somewhere there is somebody who does the exact opposite.
I don't think upright is very common in the UK or Oz. Probably something to do with the beer.