A section for Vitara and SJ owners.
If you have not yet upgraded to a Jimny then you can discuss your current Suzuki 4x4 here!
If you have not yet upgraded to a Jimny then you can discuss your current Suzuki 4x4 here!
Wheel bearing..
- lesgrandepotato
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Elite Member
-
Registered
Less
More
- Posts: 189
- Thank you received: 57
29 Sep 2023 10:55 #251077
by lesgrandepotato
Wheel bearing.. was created by lesgrandepotato
Seems I’ve got a rumbley wheel bearing on the rear. Is this a knock it out at lunch job? Or is it a world or pain job? Do I need to drain the diff?
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Roger Fairclough
- Offline
- Platinum Member
-
Registered
Less
More
- Posts: 1457
- Thank you received: 210
29 Sep 2023 13:29 #251078
by Roger Fairclough
Replied by Roger Fairclough on topic Wheel bearing..
It's somewhere between the two. As long as you jack up the axle casing so that the hub is above the oil level filler plug, you do not need to empty the diff. oil.
So, jack up the axle casing, just enough to stop the oil from leaking out, remove wheel and brake drum. remove brake pipe and 4 nuts securing the axle to casing. Either plug the brake pipe or use brake hose clamp to stop fluid from escaping. If you have slide hammer, use it to remove axle shaft. If not, replace drum the wrong way round and use it to pull shaft out. The bearing is held onto the shaft by a lock ring. Using an angle grinder, carefully grind away sufficient lock ring material to nearly cut through to the shaft and finish with a chisel. Be careful. Do not cut through and damage shaft. Old bearing should be easy to remove as it is not a tight fit. If it wont pull off by hand. lightly clamp in vice and tap end of shaft with copper hammer. Do not use steel faced hammer as this may damage splines. You can use steel hammer but place piece of wood on top of shaft. Clean everything and refit in reverse order.
It can be a bit daunting but it is not rocket science.
Hint.
Put bearing end in bucket of ice colt water. Prepare brake plate and assemble onto shaft after drying shaft. If bearing comes separate to lock ring, warm bearing in micro-wave and slide into position. Heat lock ring in boiling oil and slide into position. I have a piece of scaffold pole that I use to hammer lock ring into position. This tube must be really clean so that you do not drop anything onto the bearing.
Roger
So, jack up the axle casing, just enough to stop the oil from leaking out, remove wheel and brake drum. remove brake pipe and 4 nuts securing the axle to casing. Either plug the brake pipe or use brake hose clamp to stop fluid from escaping. If you have slide hammer, use it to remove axle shaft. If not, replace drum the wrong way round and use it to pull shaft out. The bearing is held onto the shaft by a lock ring. Using an angle grinder, carefully grind away sufficient lock ring material to nearly cut through to the shaft and finish with a chisel. Be careful. Do not cut through and damage shaft. Old bearing should be easy to remove as it is not a tight fit. If it wont pull off by hand. lightly clamp in vice and tap end of shaft with copper hammer. Do not use steel faced hammer as this may damage splines. You can use steel hammer but place piece of wood on top of shaft. Clean everything and refit in reverse order.
It can be a bit daunting but it is not rocket science.
Hint.
Put bearing end in bucket of ice colt water. Prepare brake plate and assemble onto shaft after drying shaft. If bearing comes separate to lock ring, warm bearing in micro-wave and slide into position. Heat lock ring in boiling oil and slide into position. I have a piece of scaffold pole that I use to hammer lock ring into position. This tube must be really clean so that you do not drop anything onto the bearing.
Roger
The following user(s) said Thank You: lesgrandepotato
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
29 Sep 2023 13:54 #251079
by facade
If it suddenly breaks, go back to the last thing that you did before it broke and start looking there
Replied by facade on topic Wheel bearing..
The lock rings are different for ABS & non-ABS, the ABS type lock ring has the teeth on it.
There is an oil seal to change behind the bearing inside the end of the axle tube, the seal lip rubs on the lock ring, so check that the surface of the lock ring is polished, I had one that was left unpolished once, and it leaked until I put the whole thing in a lathe and polished it.
If it is a non-ABS car you shouldn't need to bleed the front brakes, or to touch that nipple on the compensator. (It is for the front circuit)
There is an oil seal to change behind the bearing inside the end of the axle tube, the seal lip rubs on the lock ring, so check that the surface of the lock ring is polished, I had one that was left unpolished once, and it leaked until I put the whole thing in a lathe and polished it.
If it is a non-ABS car you shouldn't need to bleed the front brakes, or to touch that nipple on the compensator. (It is for the front circuit)
If it suddenly breaks, go back to the last thing that you did before it broke and start looking there
The following user(s) said Thank You: lesgrandepotato
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Time to create page: 0.162 seconds