Front wheel bearing replacement
Front wheel bearing replacement
I have a front driver side wheel bearing that is starting to rumble.
I adjusted the bearings about a year ago, so figure that it is time to change them.
They are cheap, so I plan to replace all four front bearings and the seals.
I read the article in FAQ and checked out the realoem diagram. Seems fairly straight forward.
Any tips or links appreciated.
Cheers,
Blaise
PS-funny thing is that my wheel bearings are one of the few things that was not replaced when I did all my work to the car.
I adjusted the bearings about a year ago, so figure that it is time to change them.
They are cheap, so I plan to replace all four front bearings and the seals.
I read the article in FAQ and checked out the realoem diagram. Seems fairly straight forward.
Any tips or links appreciated.
Cheers,
Blaise
PS-funny thing is that my wheel bearings are one of the few things that was not replaced when I did all my work to the car.
1977 BMW 530i
1973 R75/5 BMW (motorcycle)
1973 R75/5 BMW (motorcycle)
-
BimBim2oo2
- Posts: 268
- Joined: Sat Jul 07, 2012 12:49 pm
- Location: Boise, Idaho
I did this last night. No big deal.
Interestingly, when driving, if I slightly swerved the car back and forth, it would get louder on a right swerve and go away on a left.
That lead me to think that it was the front left bearing, since a right turn would load that bearing.
It was actually the right bearing. I guess unloading the bearing made it noisy.
The "good" side also showed signs of wear, but was not totally destroyed like the "bad" side.
Anyway, just sharing for the diagnostic part, as I thought it was interesting.
This job took me about 3 hours. Part of that time was cleaning all of the old bearings so that I could inspect them.
https://picasaweb.google.com/1030509870 ... directlink
Interestingly, when driving, if I slightly swerved the car back and forth, it would get louder on a right swerve and go away on a left.
That lead me to think that it was the front left bearing, since a right turn would load that bearing.
It was actually the right bearing. I guess unloading the bearing made it noisy.
The "good" side also showed signs of wear, but was not totally destroyed like the "bad" side.
Anyway, just sharing for the diagnostic part, as I thought it was interesting.
This job took me about 3 hours. Part of that time was cleaning all of the old bearings so that I could inspect them.
https://picasaweb.google.com/1030509870 ... directlink
1977 BMW 530i
1973 R75/5 BMW (motorcycle)
1973 R75/5 BMW (motorcycle)
- alotawatts
- Posts: 438
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 3:52 am
- Location: Seattle WA
Great pics, as a matter of fact!!!
One question; did you re-pack or replace them?? It looks like a -re-pack!
OK, Another one, what format did you use to download the pics???
I want to download some pics from my Android Atrix sooo bad!!
There are no on-screen directions that I can find.
Please PM me when you have a lil time,,,,no hurry.
Thanx in advance,,,,Greg
One question; did you re-pack or replace them?? It looks like a -re-pack!
OK, Another one, what format did you use to download the pics???
I want to download some pics from my Android Atrix sooo bad!!
There are no on-screen directions that I can find.
Please PM me when you have a lil time,,,,no hurry.
Thanx in advance,,,,Greg
Rosallina/'80 528i
Buster/'82 635Euro
Hit the apex in Long Beach
Buster/'82 635Euro
Hit the apex in Long Beach
- Robert Bondi
- Posts: 403
- Joined: Sun Jan 11, 2009 12:33 am
- Location: Austin, TX
I had one of my rear wheel bearings fail a few years ago. The rears are a big job.
In addition to the turning technique to diagnose which side has the offending
part, I found just spraying a little water on the wheel and wheel hub was very effective. I had water instantly vaporize off the left side and not the right. The bad bearing was creating a lot of extra friction and consequently a lot of extra heat.
In addition to the turning technique to diagnose which side has the offending
part, I found just spraying a little water on the wheel and wheel hub was very effective. I had water instantly vaporize off the left side and not the right. The bad bearing was creating a lot of extra friction and consequently a lot of extra heat.
Robert
77 530i
77 Euro 528
77 530i
77 Euro 528
Good idea, thanksRobert Bondi wrote: In addition to the turning technique to diagnose which side has the offending
part, I found just spraying a little water on the wheel and wheel hub was very effective. I had water instantly vaporize off the left side and not the right. The bad bearing was creating a lot of extra friction and consequently a lot of extra heat.
1977 BMW 530i
1973 R75/5 BMW (motorcycle)
1973 R75/5 BMW (motorcycle)
Robert Bondi wrote:I had one of my rear wheel bearings fail a few years ago. The rears are a big job.
In addition to the turning technique to diagnose which side has the offending
part, I found just spraying a little water on the wheel and wheel hub was very effective. I had water instantly vaporize off the left side and not the right. The bad bearing was creating a lot of extra friction and consequently a lot of extra heat.
Hmmm, good thought. Except as cheap as they are a lot of us even have infrared thermometers, AKA temp guns, which could be used before it got that bad. Even a 20 degree difference would be significant.
Mike W.
02 525ita. Wife's, aka grocery getter
02 530i. New to the fleet, 3 pedals.
03 QX4, AKA the Datsun. Finally got the 4WD vacationmoble to stop smoking.
07 Xterra. Still on the DL, a purchase from hell.
02 525ita. Wife's, aka grocery getter
02 530i. New to the fleet, 3 pedals.
03 QX4, AKA the Datsun. Finally got the 4WD vacationmoble to stop smoking.
07 Xterra. Still on the DL, a purchase from hell.
- Robert Bondi
- Posts: 403
- Joined: Sun Jan 11, 2009 12:33 am
- Location: Austin, TX
Mike W. wrote:Mike,Robert Bondi wrote:
Hmmm, good thought. Except as cheap as they are a lot of us even have infrared thermometers, AKA temp guns, which could be used before it got that bad. Even a 20 degree difference would be significant.
I actually do have an IR gun. I made the water discovery somewhat by
accident while doing a little touch-up wheel cleaning.
This actually wasn't something I let go long. The bearings were only whining intermittently, so I had to do a bit of intentional driving on them just to diagnose. I remember having periods of whining off and on while driving down straight stretches of road at 40 MPH, but had trouble reproducing it in an empty parking lot while doing the turns.
Robert
77 530i
77 Euro 528
77 530i
77 Euro 528



