When do you know to have the bearings replaced? I am working on the suspension right now and I noticed how difficult is is to turn the wheels. Not like any other car where if you give it a good spin it will roll for a while. These seem to have ALOT of friction in them. You are doing good to get a full spin out of them before they stop.
Any thoughts?
Wheel bearings
I don't think you'll find a cotter pin on the spiders. The shop manual tells you to torque the nut to 5 ft-lbs, then back off the nut 30° before staking the nut. My personal experience is that this leaves the wheel bearings too loose sometimes. If that's the case, I back it off less than 30° before staking the nut. In a nutshell, you want to tighten it enough to take out as much play as possible, but not too much that will put drag on the wheel as it spins.Jim DeShon wrote: Be sure to install a new cotter pin. ...J.D.
I use a hammer and a punch to stake the nut into the top and bottom grooves on the spindle. This design irks me -- I'd much rather have the cotter pin type of retention.
alvon
Sorry, wrong car. You are correct. It's been a while since I have been into my Fiat's frontend [I've owned the car since 85']. I still use the same procedure except for the cotter pin. I don't care for torque specs. on wheel nuts The threads may be tight or loose effecting the bearing play or, the inner race may hang up on the spindle. By using the washer to judge how tight the bearing is you know you are OK. I had a bearing sieze on the freeway one time by torqueing it "to spec.". To each...his own, though. ...J.D.