Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Hubcaps
Or Wheel Covers, What's In A Name? |
by:
Phil
Sollecito |
Cars
and trucks built before about 1935 came
on wire spoke wheels with small metal caps
installed to seal the wheel hub on the axle.
Those early "HUBcaps" were smaller than
3" in diameter, made of heavy gauge plated
steel hammered onto the hub of the wheel.
Their main function was to keep dirt out
of the spindle nut and the wheel bearings.
In the 1930s, automobiles transitioned from
mere modes of transportation to statements
of status and style. Hubcaps became more
decorative than functional. The 'dog dish'
style was born, chrome hemispheres 9 inches
in diameter, covering the lug nuts and the
center of the wheel. About the same time,
wheel technology advanced and spoke wheels
were replaced by wheels formed from stamped
steel.
In the '40s, Cadillac lead the pack in adding
sparkling chrome by the acre: bumpers, grills,
trim lines, window borders, hood ornaments,
hood vents, headlights, running boards,
etc. Increasing the size of the chrome hubcaps
added reflective surface.
By the '50s, hubcap diameters increased
to the point they covered the entire steel
wheel with chrome. Many of this period were
flat rounds looking like chrome Frisbees,
with little design differentiation. It was
during this time the term 'wheel cover'
came into use.
Over the last 50 years, the terms 'hubcaps'
and 'wheel covers' have become synonymous
as the lightweight, full-diameter decorative
coverings of standard steel wheels.
One of the hallmarks of modern hubcaps is
their interchangeability. Nearly any hubcap
of the correct size will fit any standard
steel wheel that will take a hubcap. This
means that changing styles is very easy.
We are not limited to those styles designed
by our particular auto manufacturer.
If you would like to read this article with
pictures of classic cars that illustrate
the examples given, go to http://www.autoamenity.com/FAQ/Hubcap-Wheelcover.htm
About the author:
Phil Sollecito is the webmaster for AutoAmenity,
Seattle retailer of hubcaps, wheelskins,
wheel simulators, grill inserts, and other
automotive trim products. http://www.autoamenity.com
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|