All I have ever done with a typical shape wheel bearing is to clean it up in gasoline, blast it out with air jet, spinning FAST in each direction, while I hold the inner race...
:crutches:
I was also told at a young age never to spin a dry bearing at high speeds since it's not to the bearings advantage.Gene, are you saying that you spin a wheel bearing with air?
Gary let us know when you run out of grease if the spring gives you the vacuum break you need to pull the piston out for reloading. This is why I chose to refill using a gun. If your vacuum break spring is like mine and it doesn't work well you could always drill a hole and put a valve in for the vacuum break. I wonder now if you could remove the zerk from the center shaft and get a vac break ?I used it last night for the first time doing some T/A's. It worked well, I still rotate and pack the grease in the bearing. I didn't get as messy, overall I like it. There is a spring mounted on the piston to offer a vacuum break once bottomed out. I didn't use a grease gun to load it, just scooped out the grease from the 1-lb tub and loaded it.
You may find them online, I don't know. The bearing supplier I use as a few if anyone wants one.Not sure how the price compares at $35 but I like it.
This looks like the same one only without the decal!
I guess I paid a little more for it but then I did support the local shop too.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Lisle-Bearing-P...tem&pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4ceef1f645
This looks like the same one only without the decal!
I guess I paid a little more for it but then I did support the local shop too.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Lisle-Bearing-P...tem&pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4ceef1f645
Saw the same one at Sears today for 25 bucks, even labeled "Lisle"
All I have ever done with a typical shape wheel bearing is to clean it up in gasoline, blast it out with air jet, spinning FAST in each direction, while I hold the inner race...
:crutches:
Gene, are you saying that you spin a wheel bearing with air??
Better stop doing that asap - one the first things I learned when as a teenager working in a shop. Spinning the bearing fast with air the bearing can easily come apart, which it did on me. Luckily my only injury was 2 nice round cuts on my finger where I had the bearing on like a ring. Shop owner gave me a lecture that day. Later in life as a factory rep for an auto parts manager one of the NAPA distribution center general managers had a bad eye. Story was, early in his career as a road salesman he was in a shop when an apprentice was spinning a bearing - it came apart and took out the salesmans eye.
I'm sure your gonna say you've been doing this for years - very lucky, but for anyone else that doesn't know...............
All I have ever done with a typical shape wheel bearing is to clean it up in gasoline, blast it out with air jet, spinning FAST in each direction, while I hold the inner race...
:crutches:
Gene, are you saying that you spin a wheel bearing with air??
Better stop doing that asap - one the first things I learned when as a teenager working in a shop. Spinning the bearing fast with air the bearing can easily come apart, which it did on me. Luckily my only injury was 2 nice round cuts on my finger where I had the bearing on like a ring. Shop owner gave me a lecture that day. Later in life as a factory rep for an auto parts manager one of the NAPA distribution center general managers had a bad eye. Story was, early in his career as a road salesman he was in a shop when an apprentice was spinning a bearing - it came apart and took out the salesmans eye.
I'm sure your gonna say you've been doing this for years - very lucky, but for anyone else that doesn't know...............
I don't remember much from high-school auto-shop but I remember that if you were caught spinning a bearing like that it was in instant fail. The teacher was really touchy about it, seems to me he knew someone that lost a couple of fingers that way.
Ok, that looks just like the one on the SnapOn truck. I don't think they make half the stuff they used to.