46Dodgegirl Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 Hey Guys and Gals, So this happened! Broke a rear bearing.... one side had plenty of grease, other side had none. Saddened by this event, so soon in the game. j Quote
1941Rick Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 Somebody think it was oiled?.....there is a plug that can be removed to get some grease in there at service time. Quote
ptwothree Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 Bummer....Now what??? Do you have a new one sourced? Any damage to the housing? I assume this was the side with no grease.....That's a nice axle puller .... I've got a similar one. 1 Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 25, 2013 Author Report Posted March 25, 2013 It's all apart and going to get new parts tomarrow. Its a 61-69 Chrysler rear end, so I should be able to find them. I hope.... I just bought it a year ago, so Im unsure what was done and what wasnt. Its a 318 motor, automatic tranny and a Chrysler broken rear bearing. Im very glad that we had the Custom Puller today because it WAS NOT breaking loose, no matter how hard we used the "hand dandy" sledge hammer ! I know the previous original owner took very good care of it but it was soon past down to his kids, so unsure what was done. We are the 2nd owners. j Quote
Dodgeb4ya Posted March 25, 2013 Report Posted March 25, 2013 Looks like the bearing got very hot and toasty! 1 Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 25, 2013 Author Report Posted March 25, 2013 (edited) I agree, it got a little of something and not enough of something else! Edited March 25, 2013 by 46Dodgegirl Quote
Young Ed Posted March 25, 2013 Report Posted March 25, 2013 Thats nothing! Dad and I bought a 66 Fury that had been driven until the wheel come out against the quarter. The few roller bearings we actually found were ground flat. Most came out as just metal dust. Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 25, 2013 Author Report Posted March 25, 2013 (edited) While we had it in the shop, there just wasnt enough room to get a good pull, so we took it outside. It helps to have the right tools! Edited March 25, 2013 by 46Dodgegirl Quote
Scruffy49 Posted March 25, 2013 Report Posted March 25, 2013 Not bad. And it should be a 65 or up axle, tapered 5 lug stuff through 64. Mine failed on my 69 D100 in middle of nowhere (okay, Trementon) Utah during a cross country move. Idiot who rebuilt the rear end did not know the bearings were greased instead of splash lubricated. 2 days for parts to be sourced, ordered and arrive. Less than a day for the re-rebuild. Nice truck. 1 Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 25, 2013 Author Report Posted March 25, 2013 yes Scruffy49, I read your post when we were searching for a fix with this truck. I am confused with the axle grease/lubricant. First because, I just dont know theses things.. but I thought these type of bearings were "greased" not oiled. But someone said no, its an oil based lubricant. ok. Today I went to the mechanic to have it all fixed at itll be 350 for shocks, u-joints, brearings and labor. The bearings were $50.00 ea. Im just excited itll be running by this weekend. April is our areas', Kool April nights week. j Quote
Scruffy49 Posted March 26, 2013 Report Posted March 26, 2013 $50 each? Mopar Performance "green" conversion set that eliminates the adjusters? Ouch. If standard bearings join the Sweptline forum (sweptline.org) and look up setting the bearing/axle play... 8.75s with "normal" bearings are a bit of an odd duck. You have to adjust the axles, not just stab them in and bolt them up like a GM, Ford or Dana 44 rear end. Good to hear it will be up and running this weekend. The re-rebuild on mine is still going strong 2 years later. Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 26, 2013 Author Report Posted March 26, 2013 Is the adjustment you speak of regarding a Chrysler 65-72 years? This is what I have. Quote
48Dodger Posted March 26, 2013 Report Posted March 26, 2013 Yep. You'll usally find it on the passenger side. It has a dial with holes in it and a retaining clip. I'm wondering if your clip went missing and lossen everything up and destroyed the bearings. If everything is correct with your axle, you should have about 0.13 end play (set with a dial indicator. OR you can do like most weekend warriors and tap the non adjusting side in solid and turn the adjusting side in til there is no end play. THEN back it off about 4 knotches. The retaining clip looks like a pear shaped washer with a 90 degree "tooth" on the end. The clip is held in place by one of the 5 housing bolts with the tooth going into one of the holes in the dial (to retain the end play setting). When you're done, it should be near the 0.13 you want. 48D Quote
48Dodger Posted March 26, 2013 Report Posted March 26, 2013 I just re-read your reply.....make sure your mechanic packed the bearings! They DO NOT make contact with the gear oil. You may have missed what Scruf said in post #9: "Idiot who rebuilt the rear end did not know the bearings were greased instead of splash lubricated" You replied in post #10: "but I thought these type of bearings were "greased" not oiled. But someone said no, its an oil based lubricant. ok." So this tells me you may have missed the info that those bearing need to be packed with grease. Hopfully your mechanic is mopar savy. 48D Quote
Scruffy49 Posted March 26, 2013 Report Posted March 26, 2013 For that price on a bearing I'm rather hoping the mechanic tracked down the sealed version. Standards ran me $20 per side. Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 26, 2013 Author Report Posted March 26, 2013 Thanks for that info, I personally wont be replacing it. I am only good with tearing things apart and losing the stuff that is needed. This time I organized everything-shock!!! My mech works on a 46 power wagon, that has won so many trophies he doesnt show anymore. Its extremely nice! Hes experienced with this model so Im in good hands. While Im waiting, I pulled the bumper off, replacing the rear lights and brackets with original. Cleaning everything up-lust of dirt over the years. ALTHOUGH - while I was under there I found a threaded bolt attached to the frame, one directly on the other side, obviously something is supposed to be attached to them. I will upload a picture if I can. I have just plywood for a bed, I was concidering taking that out too and just replace it with a nice piece of wood. I dont want to go original because I wont use it if I do. When I painted my Peterbilt, I didnt want to work it but was force to haha...Just how I roll! Thanks for all this info!! j Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 27, 2013 Author Report Posted March 27, 2013 While I was looking under the truck today I found these on both sides, threaded. I dont know what they are. Can someone tell me ? thanks j Quote
Solution Don Coatney Posted March 27, 2013 Solution Report Posted March 27, 2013 Looks like a shock absorber mount???? Quote
46Dodgegirl Posted March 27, 2013 Author Report Posted March 27, 2013 Oh yes you're correct, we did take those off to get new ones... I forgot about those Thanks! Quote
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