all done.
there is quite a gap between the bearing and crown wheel, in fact my bolster was too thin for the job, so i switched to a better shaped cold chisel. that just pushed the outer race which sprung back as soon as the chisel was removed.
then we used the bolster on one side to take up the slack, while the chisel went in from the other side. one of us held the crown wheel and located the business end of the chisel while the other applied a judicious dose of snap~on's finest dead blow hammer. the holder also spotted for the gap closing between chisel and crown wheel to avoid damage.
after swapping sides a few times, it started to move. by adding various bits of scrap steel behind the bolster to fill the expanding gap it got big enough to get my puller in, which spun it off straight away.
if i do the job again i will grind down the feet of the puller so it fits from the off
i miced up the bearings and my crappy old micrometer made them within a fraction of a gnat's cock the same size. certainly less than a tad of a bee's wing anyway using the British Standard Insect Scale.
shim went back in as was
this was Springer's GSA and the work was done as the output seal was leaking. also springer complained of a thrumming noise from the area.this was only changed 2000 miles previously and bearing failure was the suspect. no wheel play was evident and there was no real roughness when turning the wheel, just some very slight unevenness that i put down to the UJs.
on removal of the seal, the bearing looked fine, but we decided to remove the cover to check it better. again, seemed okish, vaguest hint of roughness maybe, but as we had a new bearing and associated bits lying around* we changed it anyway.
when it was all back together, there was absolutely no hint of roughness when turning the wheel and was smooth as a very smooth thing. no idea about the thrumming yet, as i've not heard back from springer. he may be awaiting the breakdown truck as i right
*thanks to Pikey Dave for leaving a box of bits here years ago, i'll sort you out for them later
