rbattelle
TDR MEMBER
As it says in the other thread, I paid only $166 for the new bearing.
Brods, an excellent point. Yes, I still think this design is, fundamentally, a good one. It's only serious flaw is the total lack of grease applied to the unit on assembly at the plant. If the bearings slid apart from the knuckle with no effort, I think the arrangement would be particularly convenient. the other change I would make is a grease fitting, but as others have pointed out it's possible to introduce fresh grease via the ABS sensor hole.
One thing I didn't point out is that I used almost an entire can of PB Blaster on the bearing. Notice there is not a single trace of the penetrating fluid anywhere on the portion that fits inside the knuckle.
Several people have reported success with the power steering method, but like I said I'm pretty uncomfortable with it. I mean, if necessary do you really want to put 50000 lb of compressive load on anything under the truck (if that's what it takes)? I don't.
Necessity is the mother of invention, and I've been working on some designs for a tool that will pull these bearings without risking anything by applying all the pulling force to the knuckle itself. I've got some ideas and I'm going to build something over the winter in anticipation of doing the same work on the passenger side in the spring. It would be nice to make something capable of 50 or 60 tons pulling force, but I don't know whether that's going to be possible (or practical). Rest assured it'll be massively "overbuilt". Stay tuned, I guess.
Ryan
Brods, an excellent point. Yes, I still think this design is, fundamentally, a good one. It's only serious flaw is the total lack of grease applied to the unit on assembly at the plant. If the bearings slid apart from the knuckle with no effort, I think the arrangement would be particularly convenient. the other change I would make is a grease fitting, but as others have pointed out it's possible to introduce fresh grease via the ABS sensor hole.
One thing I didn't point out is that I used almost an entire can of PB Blaster on the bearing. Notice there is not a single trace of the penetrating fluid anywhere on the portion that fits inside the knuckle.
Several people have reported success with the power steering method, but like I said I'm pretty uncomfortable with it. I mean, if necessary do you really want to put 50000 lb of compressive load on anything under the truck (if that's what it takes)? I don't.
Necessity is the mother of invention, and I've been working on some designs for a tool that will pull these bearings without risking anything by applying all the pulling force to the knuckle itself. I've got some ideas and I'm going to build something over the winter in anticipation of doing the same work on the passenger side in the spring. It would be nice to make something capable of 50 or 60 tons pulling force, but I don't know whether that's going to be possible (or practical). Rest assured it'll be massively "overbuilt". Stay tuned, I guess.
Ryan