2001LC
SILVER Star
Yeah, bass or metal chisel with large round head. The brass is a bit soft, so you'll shave edge as you pound out race. Just keep turning brass dowel, to flattest edge (lip) of dowel, catching race as you work side to side pounding out. (Tip: I grind my brass dowel head flat, as the edges of head get rounded) If using steel chisel, which is faster. You may mare the race seating surface (inner wall wheel hub). Just knock down any burns off wall, that may interfere with race as it's driven in. I use a medium stone on a small handheld rotary tool, to deburr.So the inner and outer races are pretty easy to drive out with a brass drift?
Also, I know I have a buggered up hub bolt (AKA wheel stud) so I’ll probably replace that while there. Hammer the old one out and brass hammer the new one in?
These days, I use and air hammer with long stem larger round head steel chisel for races, and brass headed air chisel for wheel hub cones washers. I can pop races out with steel air chisel, in 10 seconds, without maring inner walls of wheel hub. Angle and proper head on chesil is key.
I'm even faster, freeing cone washers. With my modified brass, factory method.
Factory recommended bass method.
Lug bolt are pound out with steel. We're not concerned with damaging the old lug, we're replacing. Rears can be done on the vehicle. Front are much more involved. Fronts we must not only remove wheel hub. But we must also remove rotor from wheel hub.
Removing rotor from wheel hub, once hub remove from knuckle:
- Scrape inner hub area/cylindrical that rotor must pass over to remove baked on brake dust and rust (crud rotor disk may get hung up on). Get off the harden brake dust and rust best you can. Power wash.
- This step for the crudy rust stuck on rotors. Place wheel hub with rotor, in a catch pan. Add ATF to inner area where rotor bolt head are. ATF is and excellent penetration and derusting oil. Let AFT soak in, overnight.
- Remove the five 17mm bolts.
- Place rotors disk on wooden blocks. High enough so that wheel hub suspended in the air (off your working surface)
- I use a dead blow hammer, and pound on back of wheel hub. Pound wheel hub off rotor, by hitting in side to side pattern. Alternately, use a wood block to protect wheel hub or a lead hammer. Whatever you do. Do not damage wheel hub, by hitting with hard metal. Ever these brass hammers, which are forged brass, can damage the wheel hub. We must not damage the seal seat area and the teeth, speed sensor reads on back side of wheel hub.
After cleaning inner wheel hub, I soak overnight. I place in catch pan, since ATF will seeps out, as it frees rust and brake dust crud.
NOTE: I no longer use these plastic hammers.
I no longer use these plastic hammers. I found, as I pounded out really stuck rotors. The plastic gave way, to the metal within. This can damage the hub. I've found a dead blow hammer works the best.
Once rotor off wheel hub. You can then beat out lug bolts you're replacing, with steel hammer. Then use a lug nut and washer (as spacers), to pull new lugs bolt (studs) through wheel hub and seat all the way in wheel hub. Alternately use a press or vise as makeshift press.
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