I've got the prop off which wasn't easy. Now the tool I'm using will not move the bearing. So my question is it easier to drop the rudder or lift the engine to remove the shaft? I'm working by myself so dropping the rudder might not be an option. If I lift the engine what connections will I have to remove? Will just undoing the mounts be good enough? Can I strap a 4x4 across the companion way and use a come along? Thanks
Don't be frustrated by this at all. Only about 5% of the bearings press out
easy. Most home made tools I have seen are nowhere near the duty of the Strut-Pro which uses hardened steel and is MASSIVE... Even with the Strut-Pro not all bearings will press out, about 5% will not even with a hydraulic or Strut-Pro tool..
Two years ago I watched the guy next to me on a big Hunter try his hardest to remove his cutlass. He built a very sweet looking tool that I thought looked very well througth out and made.. I offered to help but he was intent on making his tool work. Finally by the third day of tool "tweaking" he gave up. My Strut-Pro got it out in about 3 minutes but this bearing was a very, very tight fit.. The new one needed soap to press in...
These are supposed to be
bearing press fit and that is a broad spectrum in terms of interference fit. Some wind up on the sloppy end and some wind up on the very tight end. Some galvanically bond/corrode themselves to the strut.. Some fit EXTREMELY tight and other just snug. Most fall into the very tight fit range.
I don't even expect my Strut-Pro to remove
all cutlass bearings. A home made tool will likely remove even fewer....
I have removed over 150 cutlass bearings so do have a decent n=X data pool to draw from.