IIRC the wheels are pressed steel so there should be little risk of a crack developing if the drilling is done correctly. Or perhaps the brake hole is in an awkward place?
Just a thought.

yes, but not much use for Peetee - aren't the MM's on 4.5" PCD?My MM has them!
You could probably manage to get them to fit both - mainly it will depend on matching them up with the drum access holes.Hang on. You'd have to keep the wheels at the same end of the car on 1098's because of the different diameter brakes
The MM was the only one with the adjuster 'holes'. They were deleted upon the introduction of the Series II and the wheel design changed altogether in December 1953 with the introduction of the later A-type axle (as opposed to the split type). The alterations were: Smaller PCD (4" instead of 4.5"), pressings holding the hubcaps on instead of studs and wheel nuts instead of bolts.bmcecosse wrote:Early Minors (not just MM) and A35 had exactly this.
Well, you either had an early split-casing axle (MM & early SII) and were using MM wheels, or had a later axle and the wheels drilled.I used to adjust up my brakes during night rallies by rolling the car along until the hole lined up with adjuster. Could usually manage one adjuster at each control until my navigator had worked out the next bit of the route!
Onne, on page 52, it shows a Series II wheel (and it's in the Series II section of the book) and the hole is deleted.Onne wrote:I thought the studs on the wheels were deleted when the 1000 was introduced?
Well, that is what Original Morris Minor has. no adjuster hole though.
Although I can see a rubber grommet on the picture!
(page 52 of Ray Newell's Original Morris Minor)
They seem to work fine for 10 years / 100,000 miles.True but have you ever had a car with self adjusting rear brakes. Huh!