Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 00:00:00 -0800
Reply-To: Jere Hawn <jghawn@EARTHLINK.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Jere Hawn <jghawn@EARTHLINK.NET>
Subject: Re: Wheel bearings, and advice
In-Reply-To: <200503100621.j2A6LiDo071488@ceres.aros.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Hi John,
The nut removal tool is kind of a double action breaker bar too. You pull
it as tight as you can then on the flat part,, you smack the dickens out of
it until the cotter pin holes line up. (have this tool with you when you go
to the truck stop so you can tighten it up enough to get home.)
If you are going by the book 300 lbs of torque.... well in, Master Bentley,
they have an equation on adding an extension on the drive side, or buy a
300lb torque wrench.
Here's a question for everyone. How many or you torque the rear axle nut to
300lbs and how many tighten it as tight as they can get it/cotter pin hole
line up?
Jere
-----Original Message-----
From: Vanagon Mailing List [mailto:vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com] On Behalf Of
Anonymous Digest
Sent: Wednesday, March 09, 2005 10:14 PM
To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM
Subject: Re: Wheel bearings, and advice
In <000201c52535$c3339840$6501a8c0@cbetest12>, on 03/09/05
at 09:55 PM, "Jere Hawn" <jghawn@earthlink.net> said:
>Hi
>Here's my humble opinion:
>Buy the VW tool (about $20) 1/2" drive and a 3 lb sledge this will help
>you put it back on.
Thanks Jere,
I appreciate the idea. I am not adverse to even grinding the bolt off,
very carefully, and maybe only to where it is thin enough to chisel it
off, although I know it might be catastrophic if I screw it up. The truck
shop seems a decent option.
Anyway, how can I put the bolt back on to the proper torque with a sledge
hammer?
I have visions of the scenario which you played out, wherein the existing
nut simply will not come off no matter what is done with a breaker bar and
the appropriate calistenics (sp) so I am counting the number of
recommendations to go to a truck shop, and it seems that idea is winning
out.
Has anyone had a mechanic say no to this request, based on the liability
of sending someone off with their nuts loose? (been wanting to use that
phrase since I started this thread <g>)
Like I said, I am now officially overthinking this, and need to do
something and get the rust and the grease flowing. I guess first I will
try and get it past the inspection and emissions tests and if that goes
well, the next step is obvious.
I hate this time of year because of those damn tests. Off in the distance,
there is a huge trash/tire/whoknowswhat fire been going on for like two
days. The fire dept is just letting it burn. A few weeks ago, a Butane
truck overturned and burned for what seems like a day or two. They just
stood and watched it burn, telling the reporters how it will just
dissipate into the atmosphere. I show up with my vanagon and have three
PPM of HC too much, and they get all bent up and make me pay a fortune to
have the guys tweak it till it drops below their stupid, imaginary number.
Then I get a paper thanking me for saving the environment. What is wrong
with this picture?
Sorry, I digress.....
Anyway, much obliged.
John