Just a FYI thread about building a home made "shaft in place" cutlass bearing extractor. The basis/idea for my extractor is from someone else out there who had posted some pictures of an extractor composed of two wooden blocks with suitable holes, and two threaded rods and a pair of pusher sleeves (so, thanks to whoever that was!)
My extractor is composed of:
The aft block can be reversed, and with a 1" I.D. washer in place can be used to push in a new bearing. The prop must be removed for this, but the shaft can be left in place.
Cheers
Chris

My extractor is composed of:
- 5/8- 20TPI threaded rods (x2) & nuts (x6)
- 2 quarter sawn Fir blocks of wood, one of them split, with appropriate holes
- 1/2" carriage bolts with washers and wing nuts
- Set of sleeves with I.D. 1", and O.D. ~1.23", ~5" long
- Split wooden block has a 1" hole for the shaft and two 5/8" holes for the rods, plus two 1/2" holes for the carriage bolts that hold it together on the shaft in front of the strut.
- The split forward block also has a recessed location for a 1" I.D. washer that takes the brunt of the compression from the split sleeves so the wood doesn't compress and get damaged (the washers did flex and bend a little in use).
- The solid wooden aft block has the two 5/8" holes, but the centre hole is 1 5/16" (just a shade larger than the O.D. of my bearing. The 1 5/16" hole has a 1/2" deep section that is 1 1/2" in diameter. This fits over the strut, and properly centres the block of wood (carefully doing this on a drill press keep the holes properly aligned)
- For the split sleeves, I found a piece of 1" I.D. pipe, and had the outside machined down to the ~1.23" so it would just fit inside the strut (and then cut in half lengthwise)
- I used double 5/8" washer between each nut and the wooden blocks, and put some white grease between them as a bearing surface (turned out to be very effective)
- I used double nuts of the aft end of the rods locked against each other with loctite added. For the forward nuts, I just clamped a visegrip on each nut (which would spin until it was blocked by the shaft) to secure the forward nuts from turning.
- I used two pieces of 6" velcro to hold the sleeves in place while assembling the extractor.
- Quick Video:
- Temperature was cold (-10C) and that might have made it easier to extract the bearing
- Barely 25 minutes from start to end
- The 20tpi rods required many turns (slow), but did provide the necessary power
- At the beginning, the bearing "popped" as it moved, every 2 or 3 half turns of the bolts, but as we progressed, the popping occurred every turn, and eventually went away as we were over 2/3s done and the extraction became continuous.
The aft block can be reversed, and with a 1" I.D. washer in place can be used to push in a new bearing. The prop must be removed for this, but the shaft can be left in place.
Cheers
Chris



