I have personally owned one Speed Seal and I service many others. I really don't understand all the hype. The time difference for me, other than with paper gasket pumps, and even then this is a 2-3 minute job, is almost non-existent. The Speed Seal wear plate / cover still wears just like any factory plate does except that it costs about 8X as much. My wear plate, for the same Westerbeke pump, costs me about $9.00.
I also don't believe making a simple cover plate considerably more complex, and with more wear items, is really a benefit to the consumer... The Johnson 09-810B-1 impeller for the Westerbeke 48080 pump is about $18.00 (last batch I bought cost me $15.25 each) and the Speed Seal bearing disc kit is $18.00 (my wear plate is $9.00)? We are supposedly doubling the life of the impeller but then we'll need to replace the bearing discs for the same price or more than the impeller. On top of that, the kit itself is $100.00...
I've simply gone back to the standard Westerbeke pump and I just replace the impeller yearly, as one really should, and as I walways did even with the Speed Seal.. I mean really, you take it out for winter, when doing a "proper" winterization, why for the mere $18.00 re-use it in the spring???
That Johnson made Westerbeke pump uses actual bearings, not sloppy bushings, so it would be very, very doubtful that the shaft is off center.. I suspect the Speed Seal simply does not go back on in the same exact location after each servicing due to some sloppy tolerances with the bolt holes??