Grandmothers, suck and eggs may spring to mind but there is today's tip.
I fitted my rear brake assemblies yesterday and this required rmoval of the half shafts.
Haynes say use a slide hammer - don't have one or fit wheel and thump each side simultaneously - not enough room so resorted into using a little
pusher.
It consits of 2 lengths of M10 studding that I bought for smoe other purpose but couldn't use due to thread pitch wrong and 2 M8 bolts with nuts
from a rotted B&Q garden bench, bits below:
in use
And in position. Using two sapnners, one to hold the bolt and other to undo the nut, the half shaft comes out nicely.
[img][/img]
[Edited on 15/1/06 by 02GF74]
Tried that and the big slide hammer wins hands down
all i did when i removed my shafts was bolt an old wheel on and hit it with a sledge hammer a few times, did the trick
I failed with a sledge hammer, so had to take my half shafts to a local garage, who *broke* their slide hammer trying to get them out - the thing
snapped on the welds. So then I went to an axle specialist, who had the mother of all slide hammers, and managed to get them out after a good few
attempts.
So I think it must depend how corroded in your bearings are. After mine were taken out for the first time I could take them out myself in a couple of
minutes with a home made slide hammer.
Gary
quote:
all i did when i removed my shafts was bolt an old wheel on and hit it with a sledge hammer a few times, did the trick