First time rebuilding a transfer case

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.

Joined
Apr 20, 2012
Threads
71
Messages
532
Location
Virginia Beach
I’ve been watching a ton of videos on YouTube. And I’ve just about got her completely torn down. I noticed that my gears have a bur that has formed and although I wouldn’t think is an issue, I wanted to survey the forum’s opinion.

IMG_4571.jpeg


IMG_4572.jpeg


IMG_4573.jpeg


IMG_4574.jpeg


IMG_4575.jpeg
 
Yep those are burrs. I would dress them off with a file now rather than have the metal go into the oil. How many miles on the clock and what did your kit cost?
 
What is the best way to remove this bearing?

View attachment 3623987
Not being patient enough to find the proper puller, I ended up pulling the needle bearings out and using a dremel tool with a “soft touch” to weaken the side wall of the sleeve and then whacked with a screwdriver and hammer to deform it and pulled out with pliers. Not my finest work, but got the job done.😉
 
Not being patient enough to find the proper puller, I ended up pulling the needle bearings out and using a dremel tool with a “soft touch” to weaken the side wall of the sleeve and then whacked with a screwdriver and hammer to deform it and pulled out with pliers. Not my finest work, but got the job done.😉
Thanks. Thats kinda what I was thinking. For some dumb reason I find myself reluctant from destroying it even though I’ll never have another use but will just sit in a random bin in my tool box
 
A bit of something must have been homogenized into the oil based on the pattern of the burs, but it doesn't seem horrible to me. I think the gears look OK based on the amount of original cutter marks remaining and lack of an odd wear pattern but the bur edges need to be cleaned up.
 
Never seen that, what did Georg say about gears ?

I'm curious to know what caused this also. A slight misalignment between the two gear would do it. @B1oodyBuzzard did you find any worn copper bushings?

A bit of something must have been homogenized into the oil based on the pattern of the burs, but it doesn't seem horrible to me. I think the gears look OK based on the amount of original cutter marks remaining and lack of an odd wear pattern but the bur edges need to be cleaned up.

Agreed, it's not to bad - caught it in time. Could have gotten hot if there was no gear oil in there also as mentioned in post #2.
 
what do the bearing surfaces on the idler shaft look like ? Was there backlash/ slop in the gears before disassembly ? I would hand file the burrs.
The idler shaft had the most obvious wear in the 6th picture. I did not notice any slop, but I definitely have done a few things out of order. Heres another of the the idler shaft and input gear.

IMG_4596.jpeg


IMG_4597.jpeg
 
I think project wrong way did a 3 part video on rebuilding a t/case.
 
What is the best way to remove this bearing?

View attachment 3623987

There is an attachment for a slide hammer to pull it. Also, you can use a deep socket with tape over the attachment hole or dowel that is a pretty close fit, pack a little grease in the bore of that bearing slide the dowel in and whack it with a hammer. Hydraulic pressure will drive the bearing out. Works on flywheel pilot bearings too.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom