Thanks, just what I was looking for. I took my old spindle out wanting to replace bearing and seals but I was confused when ordering a replacement kit that the parts were not the same. This has really helped. Thanks again, BTW the video was direct and to the point with no BS I find with other videos.
Hello, just found this very much needed tutorial. At 7:00 you reset the bearing deeper to make room for the v-seal but at 8:44 the bearing is flush.. Which one is correct, Please thank you.
perfect, thank you for the brass drift tip, unfortunately my spindle bearing seized and the outer shaft is out of shape, a tad concave for the bearing to fit
As a machinist of 45 years I would use an aluminum bar for a drift punch on something as delicate as a needle bearing. Save the brass punch for heavier duty pieces.
Great video. Thanks for uploading. I think I may have messed up the first side I put back togethor. I pressed the bearing in further until it bottomed. I doubt the seal is going to make any contact with the Teflon ring. I don’t know if I should take it apart and redo it?
I would probably just run it. It might be more prone to letting stuff in, and if so it will shorten the bearing life, but it's not likely to fail really fast
Yeah it's already togethor now, I don't think it's worth starting over. If it fails I'll have it apart again in a few years anyhow. Thanks for the tips and the video. It really helped me out. I'll have the other side put together correctly. :)@@YoshimoshiGarage
You're actually missing a outer axle seal that sits between the roller bearing and that brass thrust washer. Most of the replacements are now Teflon or some other hard longllife plastic. I just rebuilt a early 70s Ford D44 and it was missing literally ever seal. They are all essential if you want to keep the hub water tight. As well as using the outer axle c-clip to retain it into the hub and preload the seals.
@@YoshimoshiGarageI stand corrected, it's there. My parts were a little different but all there. Excellent video for anyone else missing all the seals like I was. I just went off a picture of a parts diagram
Interesting. The "red grease" is simply Mobil 1 synthetic, which was invented long after this axle was produced, and this axle was used in Ford, Dodge and Chevy (and AMC, Jeep, and who knows what else). Maybe your manual is referring to a specific type of grease that was more common back in the day. Color is more a branding than anything meaningful any more.
I found this further down in the thread @YoshimoshiGarage @YoshimoshiGarage 5 months ago That seal was missing on both sides when I tore it apart. Question, So is there a v-seal in the hub and a v-seal on the spindle?
Great video! My spindle sheared off at the inside bearing while underway sending all the parts out into the world. This video is invaluable. Thanks!
Thanks, just what I was looking for. I took my old spindle out wanting to replace bearing and seals but I was confused when ordering a replacement kit that the parts were not the same. This has really helped. Thanks again, BTW the video was direct and to the point with no BS I find with other videos.
Thanks for making this video. Just nice to see it before doing it. 👍
Thank you man, that thin rubber seal I was not sure which side went where.
Hello, just found this very much needed tutorial. At 7:00 you reset the bearing deeper to make room for the v-seal but at 8:44 the bearing is flush.. Which one is correct, Please thank you.
Good catch. It needs to be deeper for that seal
perfect, thank you for the brass drift tip, unfortunately my spindle bearing seized and the outer shaft is out of shape, a tad concave for the bearing to fit
Fantastic videos, keep up the good work.
As a machinist of 45 years I would use an aluminum bar for a drift punch on something as delicate as a needle bearing. Save the brass punch for heavier duty pieces.
Great video. Thanks for uploading.
I think I may have messed up the first side I put back togethor. I pressed the bearing in further until it bottomed. I doubt the seal is going to make any contact with the Teflon ring. I don’t know if I should take it apart and redo it?
I would probably just run it. It might be more prone to letting stuff in, and if so it will shorten the bearing life, but it's not likely to fail really fast
Yeah it's already togethor now, I don't think it's worth starting over. If it fails I'll have it apart again in a few years anyhow.
Thanks for the tips and the video. It really helped me out. I'll have the other side put together correctly. :)@@YoshimoshiGarage
I did the same thing, good luck getting it out.
You're actually missing a outer axle seal that sits between the roller bearing and that brass thrust washer. Most of the replacements are now Teflon or some other hard longllife plastic. I just rebuilt a early 70s Ford D44 and it was missing literally ever seal. They are all essential if you want to keep the hub water tight. As well as using the outer axle c-clip to retain it into the hub and preload the seals.
Something other than the small seal at 8:24?
@@YoshimoshiGarageI stand corrected, it's there. My parts were a little different but all there. Excellent video for anyone else missing all the seals like I was. I just went off a picture of a parts diagram
That seal was missing on both sides when I tore it apart
Nice video good thing a have 3 pair of spindles as spares.
I’ve been trying to get this flange off with a torch for an hour lol
My manual says to NEVER use the red grease on a Ford.
Interesting. The "red grease" is simply Mobil 1 synthetic, which was invented long after this axle was produced, and this axle was used in Ford, Dodge and Chevy (and AMC, Jeep, and who knows what else). Maybe your manual is referring to a specific type of grease that was more common back in the day. Color is more a branding than anything meaningful any more.
Beat it with steel! That's what I always say...
I found this further down in the thread @YoshimoshiGarage
@YoshimoshiGarage
5 months ago
That seal was missing on both sides when I tore it apart. Question, So is there a v-seal in the hub and a v-seal on the spindle?