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| MarkJ |
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 MarkJ World Chat Champion

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| misscrabstick |
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 misscrabstick Crazy Courier
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| MarkJ |
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 MarkJ World Chat Champion

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| Acerman |
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 Acerman Banned

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| MarkJ |
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 MarkJ World Chat Champion

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| MarkJ |
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 MarkJ World Chat Champion

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:28 - 27 Jun 2015 Post subject: |
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| Acerman |
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| MarkJ |
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 MarkJ World Chat Champion

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:32 - 27 Jun 2015 Post subject: |
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Right, I've figured out why it's so tight. The bearings are 15mm deep and the seals are 7mm deep. I popped the seals out of the other good wheel and measured the gap from the top of the bearing mounting hole to the top of the outer race - 7mm on both sides. I then went to this wheel and measured with no seals in - nearly 8mm one side, nearly 6mm the other!
So I knocked the bearings out again and measured the distance from the top edge of the bearing mounting hole to bottom where the outer race would hit the lip. If it's got a 15mm bearing and 7mm seal that's 22mm right? Well it was 22mm one the left and 23mm on the right! And the 23mm (right) side was the bearing I drove in first, essentially making the fit 1mm too tight!
Now in the Haynes it specifically says to drive the left bearing (22mm deep) in first, then the right (23mm) but doesn't actually say why, so I figure that some how the left side hole is made more accurately perhaps? Who knows. Either way it looks like I'll need some new bearings again, mount the left side down to the lip, then carefully mount the right so it is 7mm, not 8 deep.
Does that sound right? The wheel looks fine, no cracks, bumps, nothing. Manufacturing defect perhaps? It's part of my wheels I have my race wets on so I wonder if whoever originally bought it got it at a good price as it was a Friday afternoon job. |
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| Acerman |
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| MarkJ |
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 MarkJ World Chat Champion

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| Pete. |
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 Pete. Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 18:12 - 27 Jun 2015 Post subject: |
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On your GSXR you drive one bearing down the the seat, install the spacer then drive the other bearing in until it touches the spacer. Which one you fit first should be listed in the manual. They don't both get driven to the bearing seat.
It would help if you put the spindle through the assembly before pressing in the second bearing. This stops the tube spacer getting slightly cocked only to fall loose and rattle later. ____________________ a.k.a 'Geri'
132.9mph off and walked away. Gear is good, gear is good, gear is very very good  |
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| kramdra |
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 kramdra World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Oct 2010 Karma :     
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 Posted: 23:49 - 27 Jun 2015 Post subject: |
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Bollocks I asked the same question last year with this pic:
https://i1133.photobucket.com/albums/m593/Kramdra/cbr600fwheelbeaing_zps096ef845.jpg
Also asked at mot and several garages... answer was that it doesn't matter, it will compress anyway when tighten spindle.
I assumed bearings should be driven fully into their seat.. why shouldn't they... Spacers should therefore be the correct length - the gap between the seats.
Service manual has a pic of bearing being fitted with a driver and hammer with the text "drive in left bearing squarely then distance collar, the left bearing with "special tool"". No idea what the special tool is??!?
No one gave me a correct answer... that its supposed to have an adjustment gap on the second bearing? so last year I filed the spacer down to the correct size. |
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| Pete. |
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 Pete. Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 00:00 - 28 Jun 2015 Post subject: |
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Yep, the yellow spacer in your diagram is there specifically to stop the left bearing being pressed into the seat. They MUST be slightly longer than the seat-to-seat distance to prevent axial loading of the bearing.
As your manual says, left bearing first (for that wheel, on that bike) then spacer then right bearing. The 'special tool' is most likely just a threaded puller that pulls the inner races together. ____________________ a.k.a 'Geri'
132.9mph off and walked away. Gear is good, gear is good, gear is very very good  |
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| kramdra |
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 kramdra World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Oct 2010 Karma :     
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| Pete. |
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 Pete. Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 07:33 - 28 Jun 2015 Post subject: |
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Well, there are two considerations - thermal expansion and manufacturing tolerances. You can all but discount manufacturing tolerances in this case but you can't ignore thermal expansion.
The wheel is ally which has a coefficient of expansion of 22m10¯⁶/°C, and the spindle is steel and it's expansion rate is half that of ally at 11m10¯⁶/°C. The only interface between them is the three bearings and their axial clearance, which is very small.
So if you take a wheel in winter at zero degrees then move it to summer at 30 degrees, assume the two bearings are 250mm apart, the wheel housing will have expanded 0.165mm in width but the spindle only increased 0.085mm in length. Now that might not sound like a huge amount but terms of bearing axial clearance it's like trying to force a sofa through the front door sideways.
To allow for this expansion and contraction, you have that little gap between the outer race of the second installed bearing and the 'seat' machined in the wheel hub.
The job of the tubular spacer is two-fold. It maintains that gap and provides a solid support between the inner races of the bearings so that when you tighten the spindle nut you're not loading the bearings axially (basically it stops you trying to pull the inner race out of the bearing by tightening the spindle).
Specifying which bearing gets fitted first is probably a combination of two things - it controls the alignment of the wheel and therefore the chain run (in Kramdra's case pressing in the wrong bearing first would set the wheel over by 2mm) but more likely the bearing seats are machined to different classes of fit. The first bearing is not expected to move so it can have a press fit. The second bearing might have a close sliding fit so the outer race can slide to relieve axial load.
References for the clever bits:
https://engineerstudent.co.uk/thermal_expansion.html
https://www.calculatoredge.com/calc/exp.htm ____________________ a.k.a 'Geri'
132.9mph off and walked away. Gear is good, gear is good, gear is very very good  |
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| kramdra |
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 kramdra World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Oct 2010 Karma :     
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 Posted: 12:27 - 28 Jun 2015 Post subject: |
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Ok this makes sense. I will order some new bearings
However both bearings are the same press fit, they are not going to move. |
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Old Thread Alert!
There is a gap of 1 year, 68 days between these two posts... |
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| kramdra |
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 kramdra World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Oct 2010 Karma :     
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 Posted: 23:24 - 03 Sep 2016 Post subject: |
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An update! Also both bearings are equally tight bastards to get out. The fully seated right bearing was easier. The left is not any kind of sliding fit. Old bearings did 30k miles after incorrect fitting by me No play in them, still too tight. The outer dust seal spring failed, outer bearing face solid rust, but under the seal balls and races looked good, grease like new. Good time to fit new ones.
When fitting the second bearing, should I drive it all the way to the spacer, by the outer race? Seems to me the last half millimetre it should be driven by inner race to stop it going to far? (or this special honda tool) I was very careful putting it in with the old bearing as a drift, but it did go too far so I had to knock it back out a bit
TL:DR - cocked it up again. |
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| 0l0dom0l0 |
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 0l0dom0l0 World Chat Champion

Joined: 21 Oct 2009 Karma :  
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 Posted: 09:46 - 04 Sep 2016 Post subject: |
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| kramdra wrote: | An update! Also both bearings are equally tight bastards to get out. The fully seated right bearing was easier. The left is not any kind of sliding fit. Old bearings did 30k miles after incorrect fitting by me  No play in them, still too tight. The outer dust seal spring failed, outer bearing face solid rust, but under the seal balls and races looked good, grease like new. Good time to fit new ones.
When fitting the second bearing, should I drive it all the way to the spacer, by the outer race? Seems to me the last half millimetre it should be driven by inner race to stop it going to far? (or this special honda tool) I was very careful putting it in with the old bearing as a drift, but it did go too far so I had to knock it back out a bit
TL:DR - cocked it up again. |
Whatever you do, don't use the inner race to drive the new bearing down, even the last little bit. If you do, it's new bearing time again. The inner race isn't supported by anything other than the ball bearings themselves, the outer is where all the structual strength lies.
What are you using the to drive the new bearing in place? I often find that using the old bearing to start the new one going in square works well, so literally hammering the outer race of the old bearing systematically to seat it square, then I use a socket that's the size of the OD of the bearing to drive it down.
Just be slow and gentle when you get to the end, a little drag on the spacer is just about perfect when the second bearing is seated.
I made the same mistake with my TL as well and I had to get two new bearings for the same reasonas the OP.
I couldn't understand either why you wouldn't just machine a seat for the second race which would make your life a lot easier. Luckily it's quite easy to spot if there's any side loading on the bearing as it just won't run well. ____________________ CBT Passed: 30/08/2009, Theory Passed: 31/08/2010, Mod 1 Passed: 6/9/2010, Mod 2 Passed: 13/09/2010. Restriction ended 13/09/2012.
Bikes: 2007 Derbi GPR 50, 1998 Yamaha Fazer 600 (written off), 2002 Yamaha Fazer 600, 1994 CBR 600F, 2003 Triumph Daytona 600, Kawasaki ZX6R J1.....Current: 2006 Yamaha FZ6, 1998 Suzuki TL1000R and a Honda VFR 400 NC30. |
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| Commuter_Tim |
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 Commuter_Tim World Chat Champion

Joined: 09 May 2013 Karma :  
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 Posted: 19:38 - 04 Sep 2016 Post subject: |
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Pete. is totally wrong.
Here's what you do...
Using the finest Punch tool you can find, whack the bearing on the seal with the Might of Thor using the largest rock you can find/lift.
Then throw the spacer away, it's for noobs.
Next you need to drive down the second bearing as tight as it goes using the aforementioned Punch Tool method.
After this you should consider welding both sprockets in plac...
...Sorry I thought this was BodySprockets thread, nevermind, as you were.  ____________________ The above post is most likely nonsensical.
I ride a Bandit 600... badly. |
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| barrkel |
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 barrkel World Chat Champion
Joined: 30 Jul 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 19:58 - 04 Sep 2016 Post subject: |
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I just want to add: heat and cold are your friends with bearing installation. Freeze the bearings for an hour, and use a heat gun on the hub, and your life should be much easier. Probably do less damage to the hub too.
I replaced 6 bearings (4 blind) when fixing my scooter's final drive last year. Temperature difference makes things so much easier. ____________________ Bikes: S1000R, SH350; Exes: Vity 125, PS125, YBR125, ER6f, VFR800, Brutale 920, CB600F, SH300x4
Best road ever ridden: www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2MhNxUEYtQ |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 9 years, 218 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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