Re: Where to find wheel bearings?
Here is how I replace bearing housings and races in Indian motorcycle engines, aluminum wheels, and other similar mechanisms.
Gather a thick soft cloth (towel) a pair of oven mitts, a double boiler, and some cloth to cover the double boiler with.
Locate a place to work with a sturdy table or bench.
Degrease the wheel. Do it right!
Place the wheel half in the boiler with the bearing race face up. Close the boiler, turn it on between 175 F. and 250 F. and cover it with a cloth to keep the heat in. You can do this with the bearing race faced down, but sometimes the race won't fall clear free and will cock and jam and you will have to push it on out.
Allow the wheel to heat soak for 25 to 30 minutes.
Now put on the oven mitts, open the boiler and quickly lift the wheel out and drop it down on the soft towel with a little force and the bearing race will fall out. Turn the wheel back upright and put it back in the boiler and drop the new race in the wheel (be sure the proper side is up the same way the old one was). It will help if the race had been left in the freezer overnight or cooled with dry ice for a couple of hours. The race should drop in easily, if not press it down with a broom handle or other kind of wooden rod.
Close the boiler and let it cool before you take the wheel out.
If the wheel is worn out by forcing the races in and out, don't peen over the edge (or drill and pin). That is a sure way to start a crack. Instead, if the hole is not out of round or grossly oversized, use the proper Loctite product and glue the race in place (follow the directions). If the wheel had folded over, punched, or peened, file away any traces of the cracking and smooth the edge properly.
Here is how I replace bearing housings and races in Indian motorcycle engines, aluminum wheels, and other similar mechanisms.
Gather a thick soft cloth (towel) a pair of oven mitts, a double boiler, and some cloth to cover the double boiler with.
Locate a place to work with a sturdy table or bench.
Degrease the wheel. Do it right!
Place the wheel half in the boiler with the bearing race face up. Close the boiler, turn it on between 175 F. and 250 F. and cover it with a cloth to keep the heat in. You can do this with the bearing race faced down, but sometimes the race won't fall clear free and will cock and jam and you will have to push it on out.
Allow the wheel to heat soak for 25 to 30 minutes.
Now put on the oven mitts, open the boiler and quickly lift the wheel out and drop it down on the soft towel with a little force and the bearing race will fall out. Turn the wheel back upright and put it back in the boiler and drop the new race in the wheel (be sure the proper side is up the same way the old one was). It will help if the race had been left in the freezer overnight or cooled with dry ice for a couple of hours. The race should drop in easily, if not press it down with a broom handle or other kind of wooden rod.
Close the boiler and let it cool before you take the wheel out.
If the wheel is worn out by forcing the races in and out, don't peen over the edge (or drill and pin). That is a sure way to start a crack. Instead, if the hole is not out of round or grossly oversized, use the proper Loctite product and glue the race in place (follow the directions). If the wheel had folded over, punched, or peened, file away any traces of the cracking and smooth the edge properly.
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