[AT] wheel bearings
charlie hill
charliehill at embarqmail.com
Sat Jun 6 12:03:10 PDT 2015
Ok, I just looked at the old hub. The zero speed sensor is held in place
by
one allen head machine screw that goes through a molded boss on the side
of the sensor assembly. Remove the machine screw, give the zs sensor a
twist
and a tug and it pulls straight out. Inside you can see what I first
thought
was the cage of the roller bearing but I then realized that it is the "hall
effect ring".
No matter. I would be possible to push grease through the ring and into the
bearing.
I think you'd need to take an old speed sensor, drill it out and adapt some
sort of
grease fitting or a pipe nipple. That would allow you to re-mount the
sensor housing
and attach a grease gun without messing up the hub. Then I suppose you
could slowly
rotate the bearing as you pump grease in, taking care not to add too much
grease and
blow out the seal. Then you'd need to find a way to clean up the outside of
the hall effect
ring so the sensor would read it again. Could work in a pinch.
By the way, I can read the manufacturers identification on the bearing race
on the OEM
hub that I removed. It's clearly marked "Timken".
Charlie
Ivan, I have the old hub in the back of my truck. It's the factory
original piece. I'll try to remember to check it out soon and let you
know what I find.
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: Ivan
Sent: Friday, June 05, 2015 7:16 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: [AT] wheel bearings
There has been some discussion about this on Class B forum
,especially the newer chevy's . Also a website about how to go about
greasing them . Seems they are sealed on the brake rotor side but the
back side is a dust sheild which lets the grease run out . Basically you
jack up the truck,remove wheel, brake calipers and rotor . Remove the
single allen head bolt holding the ABS sensor on . Now you can use a
needle adapter or make your own and add grease to it . All shown in the
video .
Personal observation on my chevy, I have seen them with blue or red
grease so be carefull which you use . From what I understand they dont
mix well . I havent found the round toit to try mine , too busy cutting
up firewood .
Ivan 03 chevy on second pair of bearings and wobbling again
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