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Home > Maintenance & Modifications > Rear Wheel Bearing Lesssons |
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LR2goat Member Since: 18 Sep 2016 Location: New York Posts: 16 |
Since I haven't found anything similar on here, I just wanted to share my experience yesterday on changing the rear wheel bearing. Which by the way the stealership wanted $1,200 to change
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26th Feb 2017 3:14 pm |
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gasman Member Since: 02 May 2013 Location: Tyneside Posts: 897 |
And I thought these things only happen to me. Now at the point when I learn something new something old is lost out the other side !
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26th Feb 2017 4:06 pm |
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MRRover75 Member Since: 13 Jan 2017 Location: Sandnes Posts: 327 |
Hi,
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28th Feb 2017 6:57 am |
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dorsetfreelander Member Since: 20 Jul 2013 Location: Dorset Posts: 4354 |
Funny thing but I was just thinking that it's only in the last 10 years or so that my family has had wheel bearing problems with various cars (not just LR). Prior to that I never had had one fail in 30 years of motoring both private and company cars. 3 x FL1 2 manual + 1 auto
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28th Feb 2017 9:09 am |
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MRRover75 Member Since: 13 Jan 2017 Location: Sandnes Posts: 327 |
Basically, it seems that wheel bearings on modern cars are long lasting items but there is one now and then failing around. Seems to me that there is not necessary to replace them in pairs as the other side sometimes lasts 100000miles more.
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28th Feb 2017 9:16 am |
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Yorky Bob Member Since: 28 Apr 2015 Location: Yorkshire Posts: 4561 |
Old BMC cars like minis and 1100's chewed up bearings and hubs as no investment had been made in tooling for years hence the demise of the UK Motoring Industry and the rise of the Japs. I suspect we are at a point were lightness is God for better mpg / C02 figures and failures are making a come back. FL2 MY10 TD4 GS traded in at 2 years
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28th Feb 2017 9:17 am |
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LaNcE Member Since: 27 May 2016 Location: melbourne Posts: 17 |
Lesson#5! I thought I was the only idi8t. I started ringing the place that pressed the new wheel bearings in! LOL |
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3rd Sep 2017 12:39 am |
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BrianP Member Since: 20 Feb 2018 Location: Ontario Posts: 5 |
I am getting ready to do rear bearing replacement on my 2008 LR2 and have a question. Does the speed sensor need to come off/out before pulling the axle out and hub out? |
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4th Mar 2018 7:47 pm |
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LaNcE Member Since: 27 May 2016 Location: melbourne Posts: 17 |
Im sure all the sensors came out when I did mine! there was 2 if im not mistaken? |
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4th Mar 2018 8:51 pm |
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BrianP Member Since: 20 Feb 2018 Location: Ontario Posts: 5 |
Two? I only see one at the top and of course it does not want to come out easily. I broke one off in my German car the other day, don't want to do that with this one. Still haven't resolved to other cars stuck sensor. |
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4th Mar 2018 9:32 pm |
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BrianP Member Since: 20 Feb 2018 Location: Ontario Posts: 5 |
There's a few complete rear knuckles for sale on Ebay.com and they have the one sensor up top, speed sensor I assume, still installed. I figure then that you can take the axle out and then remove the hub and bearing and then replace without removing the sensor? |
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4th Mar 2018 10:16 pm |
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BrianP Member Since: 20 Feb 2018 Location: Ontario Posts: 5 |
I did both of mine, took about an hour a side. I took the speed sensor out in both cases, just in case. Used a slide hammer to remove the hub and the bearing. Used the old bearing as a drift to tap the new bearing into place ensuring that I was hammering on the outer race of the old bearing and therefore forcing the outer race of the new bearing into the hub assembly. Used a small cut off wheel to cut a groove into the inner bearing race on the hub then carefully used an air chisel to crack the race in that groove. The inner bearing race then came off easily. I used a 3/4 inch threaded bar with suitable washers, 3/4 drive sockets and nut to pull the hub into the bearing. Then bolted everything back up using thread locker on all threads. I found the easiest sequence to be:
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18th Mar 2018 12:24 pm |
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PaulCopp Member Since: 27 Feb 2012 Location: Fife Posts: 28 |
Just to add my experience.
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4th Jun 2018 8:22 am |
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Steve D Member Since: 19 Jan 2013 Location: Essexshire Posts: 4109 |
Neve done a FL2 bearing but done plenty of others over the last 40 years and never used a puller to remove the inner race that remains on the flange.. Whenever I remove a flange, invariably the race is stuck to that and I use a cutting disc to cut through as far as I can, ensuring that you cut all the way across. Then, one sharp tap in that groove with a sharp chisel and the race fractures and cracks all the way through. That then releases the race's grip on the flange and you can just tap it off. A point worth remembering though is that when you are pushing the flange through the new bearing, you must support the rear inner race otherwise the flange will push it out of the sealed bearing.
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4th Jun 2018 5:15 pm |
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