CEdwards said:
When you guys say pilot bearing you mean like a needle bearing on the end of the input shaft, then it starts to bind with the crank shaft and input shaft. Besides causing hard shifting even if the pilot bearing was shelled out it shouldn't tear up the trans. or input shaft should it?
The pilot bearing is actually lightly pressed into the flywheel on these engines. On my old '99, I had a hard time shifting into 2nd gear for quite sometime. Then, while pulling a heavy load, my clutch disk exploded(123,000 miles). After pulling things apart, I realized the pilot bearing was also trashed(just an outer shell left and the needle bearing were nowhere to be found). I installed a new clutch, pressure plate, throwout bearing and pilot bearing. It drove fine like that, even towing heavy loads(over 18,000 lbs loaded trailer, 27,300 GCW), but what I found out 20,000 miles later was that my input shaft was cracked/bent. It sheared off completely while I was driving down the highway, unloaded.
Now, did the cracked/bent input shaft tear up the pilot bearing? Or, did a bad pilot bearing cause the shaft to wobble under load, which could have caused the original clutch failure? Does that make sense? The point I'm trying to make is: Fix it early!
Two mistakes I made were waiting way too long from my original symptoms(hard shift), and not checking that transmission input shaft thoroughly while I had the truck apart. Another thing to check out is the use of a pilot "bushing" vs bearing. Plenty of folks have done this with success. Hope this helps. Mike