05 June 2007: I felt a slight hum through the steering on my G33 the other day, worst at about 55 to 60mph (constructive interference at its best!) so i jacked the front of the car up and span each front wheel off the ground. The n/s/f span freely and quietly, and there seemed to be no play either vertically or horizontally. To do this you will need standard tools plus a new Sierra Cosworth (rwd) front wheel bearing (these are sided apparently so make sure you have the n/s or o/s as appropriate) and a 41mm socket. 1. Slacken off road wheel nuts (19mm) 2. Raise front of car and secure with axle stands 3. Remove wheel nuts and road wheel 4. Undo 19mm retaining bolts on back of caliper mounting bracket and place caliper to one side, out of the way (still connected by the brake pipe of course!) 5. Remove spacer and remove brake disk and place both to one side. 6. Turn steering to full lock to whichever side suits you best to get to the back of the hub, and prize off the metal cover (see photo) 7. Take your 41mm socket and a breaker bar and place on the nut at the back of the hub, and use some sort of jimmy bar to hold the studs on the front of the hub to stop it rotating. 8. Once the nut is off you should be able to pry out the inner bearing race from the inside, and you will probably need to hit the stub axle with a hammer from the inside to pop it out of the hub carrier. (complete with outer bearing race). 9. Remove the bearing seats from the inside of the hub carrier if you can (the inner one came off for me but not the outer) and put the new ones in the freezer. This is so the new ones are easy to fit later. 10. Take the cleaned stub axle assembly and put it in the oven to get it nice and hot, this will make it easier to get the bearing off the stub axle. Also place one of the new bearings in the oven so that you can put it on the stub axle nice and easy afterwards. Photos so far:
12. Once you have removed the old bearing, give the area a good clean so that there is as little contamination as possible for the new bearing. 13. Now cool the stub axle assembly down in a sink of cold water for a couple of minutes. 14. Put the new dust seal on the cold stub axle first, and then get the nice hot bearing race out of the oven and put it on the axle - it will probably slide straight down into place (if the axle is cold enough and the bearing is hot enough), if not you may need to give it the gentlest of taps to get it all the way down and seated. Patience is key here - the whole job is very easy if the bearing is HOT enough and the stub axle is COLD enough. 15. Now that you have the assembled stub, we need to switch to the hub carrier. This is easiest worked on once it's been separated from the car, and you only have to undo 4 bolts and a nut to do that, so remove the hub carrier from the car. 16. Now put the hub carrier in the oven and make a cup of tea - it'll need to be in there for a good 20 minutes or more (my oven's fan assisted!) 17. When the hub carrier is good and hot, put it on a wooden surface or carpet (careful, it's hot remember!) and pry out the old bearing seats (i use a screwdriver and hammer and some gentle persuasion) 18. Now clean up the area ready for the new faces and put the hub carrier back in the oven to get it nice and hot again. 19. When it comes out of the oven, grab the first bearing seat from the freezer and pop it into the hub carrier - again it should more or less drop in, if it needs some *gentle* persuasion then do that with a hammer and flat screwdriver, if it isn't going on easily then either your hub carrier isn't hot enough or your bearing seat isn't cold enough. 20. Turn the hub carrier over and grab the other bearing seat from the freezer and do the same again.
21. Now reheat the hub carrier and start re-assembling - grease the new bearing race that's already in the stub axle first, and offer it up to the hub carrier. The reason for reheating the hub carrier (warm, not too hot this time) is so that the dust seals can slide into place easily, otherwise they're a pain! 22. You may also need to heat the second bearing race so as to be able to slide it on to the stub after reuniting the stub axle and hub carrier in the previous step. 23. You can then add the splined washer, final dust seal and 41mm hub nut (we will need to tighten this though - don't forget!) 24. Now take all this stuff back to the car and remount the hub carrier to the wishbones and steering rack 25. Then, using a similar method to that employed to UNDO the 41mm nut, do it back up again (remember, o/s/f has a reverse thread!) to around 275 to 315NM using a suitable torque wrench. Now test the rotation of the hub for friction and play. Then replace metal plate at the back. 26. Replace brake disc, reattach caliper, replace spacer, refit road wheel - don't forget to tighten the road wheel nuts once the car is on the ground again.
Any questions? pleasehelpmedomywheelbearings@verysideways.com
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