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I currently have ,010 clearance. .005 per side if you want to think of it that way. No problem putting it together. Just trying to decide what is too much clearance. What is a "worn out" bushing ? This clearance allows the axle to wobble in the axle tube seal. Too much it leaks. But I can't find anything in the way of numbers to assess what is a bad bushing. Just hoping someone might be able to provide some information I can't find.The spindle and the axle will have clearance - they are not intended to seal in (or out) lubricants. And some clearance is needed for the lube to stay in there. Stupid question by me: If you have .010 clearance, why won't the pieces slide together?
If you mean that the interference is .010, then I would hone it to fit (with a few (or several) thousandths of play so you an assemble it), grease it up, and put it together.
These parts only turn when the hubs are locked, so it's not like they are seeing 10K miles/year. A lubricated steel axle riding on a greasy, wide bronze bushing is going to last a LONG time, as evidenced by how many people have never replaced the bushing, even on super-high miles trucks.
Thanks I've decided to press in new ones and bore them to ,003-,005 clearance. And see what happens. You're link is the best data I've seen. I should have thought of that !!!Nerd alert: See attached Timken manual.
Pages 4 and 5 talk about shaft-to-bore misalignment, runout, and tolerances for oil seals.
Page 13, Model 26 (first line in table - General Purpose Seal) shows .015" at 1000 rpm as the allowable 'shaft misalignment' and .010" at 2000 rpm. So, by this, you are mostly in-spec for a Timkin seal. I'm going to guess that most lip seals have about the same allowances. Based on this, I would not hog-out that bronze bushing any further, however. I did not read this entire Timkin manual, nor do I have any affiliation - I'm just posting it for situational awareness. I looked at a Parker-Hannefin guide and their suggested shaft-to-bore misalignment max was .010, as well.
I doubt that there is any wear spec in the FJ40 FSM, so you might as well work with an industry source.