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Hahahaha yes it is… don’t take it apart unless you need to. 9 times out of 10 you’ll be fine. Unless you’ve broken a birfield or something in the joint is blocking its full range of motion I wouldn’t bother taking it apart. Spray it out really well with degreaser and then repack it with grease and go on your way.
Hahahaha yes it is… don’t take it apart unless you need to. 9 times out of 10 you’ll be fine. Unless you’ve broken a birfield or something in the joint is blocking its full range of motion I wouldn’t bother taking it apart. Spray it out really well with degreaser and then repack it with grease and go on your way.
Well, you can post some info here for the next guy who does it. I’m sure there’s an easy way to do it but you probably need the right set of tools. I’ve come to the realization that the factory had very specific order of operations and tools for tasks like this so that things would run smooth in the production process. We struggle with things sometimes because we don’t have the same tools or knowledge they had at the factory. Someone at some point was likely assembling dozens of birfields daily as a quota. There’s got to be an easy and straightforward way to get it done with little or no headache.Too late for that…I already took it apart. It was a soupy mess in there.