I could do it in that 1.5 hours if I had a prepped shop etc. But like I said I will spend had that time cleaning gasket material. If I just scraped the loose big stuff and gooped rtv back in there I could do it in close to that time but man it would be hard to beat the book on this job.The Labor Flat Rate Manual says 1.5 hours to remove/install the whole assembly then a few tenths each added to replace the inner/outer bearing. So apparently whoever wrote the manual didn't expect the axle to slide out as you describe. We'll see ....
That's what I fear after seeing it all and hearing how the bearings sound to me. Bull gear looks good. The gear for the brake shaft that meshes on bull gear looks good at least the side I see.I sure hope that fixes it. My impression from the sound is it is something dry and unlubricated. Doesnt fit with the innards you exposed.![]()
The wear collar get replaced with the seal. You can see it laying above the dead blow and below the snap ring pliers in the pic. Its about 2"s in diameter and provides the seal a sacrificial surface to ride on.I would replace both bearings, and with non-Chinese bearings, if you can get them. Personally, I only put cheap bearings in light load, low use, easy to service uses.
If you have a real groove cut, you may want to sand out the groove as a few imperfections can trash a seal pretty quickly. You could try to find an oversized seal. (I have never had much luck trying to do that, but it might be a lucky size.) If it is really bad, a good machinist could spray weld new metal on and get it back to size.
All the best,
Peter
I didn't understand what I read, so I didn't quote it. For the inner bearing I think it said the number should face out. Which could mean toward the wheel, or, could mean number visible as you press the bearing onto that end of the axle.I noticed that on the drawing I got. Thanks for mentioning that again. I will make sure I put it back on that way. I don't remember show they were. What about the inner bearing does the number still face outside the tractor?
Well there out now and I didn't notice. I don't see any difference in the bearings sides? But these appear to be common bearings in transfer cases and like manual transmissions so I would guess if it mattered it would also be specified in other applications the direction the bearing faces.I didn't understand what I read, so I didn't quote it. For the inner bearing I think it said the number should face out. Which could mean toward the wheel, or, could mean number visible as you press the bearing onto that end of the axle.I think something got lost in translation.
All I can suggest is examine the existing bearing before removing it.
I'm back over to our home in town now so I don't have access to the manuals at the ranch, for another week.
No it Just pulls out of the housing by hand. Its a slip fit, not press. Pull the shaft out, to let that bull gear clear the diff lock on that side. Bull gear let drop down and angled out from under the fork. I set it over to the side and you just pull the bearing out. Comes out to the inside of the trans housing. You can see it's machined surface .Does the inner bearing slide out still attached to the axle, or do you need to drive it out toward the bull gear using a pipe etc?
Thanks! I didn't know that.No it Just pulls out of the housing by hand. Its a slip fit, not press. Pull able out to let that bull gear clear the diff lock on that side. Bull gear let drop down and angled out from under the fork. I set it over to the side and you just pull the bearing out. Comes out to the inside of the trans housing. You can see it's machined surface .