Is it easier to replace the whole hub rather than just the wheel bearing on 205 diesel?

Discussion in 'Peugeot 205' started by Philip, Feb 6, 2004.

  1. Philip

    Philip Guest

    Hi,

    I have a peugeot 205 Diesel. There is a rumbling noise audible at all
    speeds which is coming from the front left hand side. I suppose this
    means that the wheel bearing needs replcing. I have a donor car and
    was wondering whether it would be easier to replace the whole hub with
    a part from the donor rather than fitting a new wheel bearing.

    If not - Is it difficult to replace the bearing with a new one? From
    what I have read in the Haynes manual it sounds like it might be a bit
    of a pain to get the old one out and I think I'll need a special tool.

    Any advice much appreciated.

    Philip.
     
    Philip, Feb 6, 2004
    #1
  2. Philip

    Andrew Kirby Guest

    (...assuming drum is removed from car...)
    First you need to remove the big circlip on the wheel side of the
    bearing, then you turn it upside down, place a suitably large drift
    agaisnt the inside face of the bearing and belt it very hard with a big
    hammer until it pops out. (you can do this since you don't care about
    the condition of the original bearing).

    To insert the new bearing, put it in the freezer for a couple of hours,
    and use a blow torch to heat up the drum (concentrating on the middle
    bit, which the bearing sits in). The hotter the drum the better.
    Take the cold bearing and drop it into the hole (make sure it goes in
    square, otherwise it might jam, which would make life awkward). It
    should drop straight in.
    Once the new bearing is in place, drizzle water on the bearing until it
    stops fizzing, to stop the heat from the drum boiling the grease in the
    bearing.

    Alternatively you could take the hub and new bearing to an engineering
    workshop and get them to press out the old bearing and press in the new
    one - this is how it should be done, and they'll probably charge a few
    pounds.

    I did this recently (replaced both drums and fitted new bearings). The
    bearings were quite expensive (~£18 ea), so it might be cheaper to pull
    the drums off a donor.

    Good luck,
    Andy
     
    Andrew Kirby, Feb 6, 2004
    #2
  3. Hi,

    Thanks, it sounds like it would be easier as you say to pull the drum (wheel
    hub right? Excuse my ignorance) of the donor car. I don't think I'll go to
    the trouble of heating / cooling to fit a new one, if I were to fit a new
    bearing I'd probably remove the drum and take it to an engineering firm as
    you suggested.

    Regards

    Phil
     
    Philip Koritsas, Feb 7, 2004
    #3
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