โMay-08-2016 06:26 PM
โMay-19-2016 10:50 AM
โMay-19-2016 09:28 AM
โMay-13-2016 07:15 AM
โMay-13-2016 06:26 AM
โMay-13-2016 05:20 AM
Bear Ghost wrote:myredracer wrote:Bear Ghost wrote:
Or should I tighten the castle nut to get to the next available hole?
Did you use a torque wrench on the axle nuts to get them seated first, then back them off? You should never tighten them to get to the nearest hole. They need a small amount of free play.
Yes I used a torque wrench set at 50 lbs and torqued the nut, spun the hub, torque/spun 2nd, 3rd time, then loosened the nut and tightened with my fingers. Had to back it off slightly to get a cotter pin hole.The nut moves with only the cotter pun holding it. But that's were I get a fraction of wobble with the tire installed.
โMay-13-2016 04:37 AM
myredracer wrote:Bear Ghost wrote:
Or should I tighten the castle nut to get to the next available hole?
Did you use a torque wrench on the axle nuts to get them seated first, then back them off? You should never tighten them to get to the nearest hole. They need a small amount of free play.
โMay-13-2016 04:36 AM
Bear Ghost wrote:
...
The only concern I have is after torquing and setting the bearing and backing the castle nut off to finger tight, the cotter pin hole is blocked. Dexter Axle's "official" wheel bearing maintenance video says to loosen it up to the next available cotter pin hole. After doing so and installing the tire, I noticed there is a very slight wobble when rocking the tire top/bottom, indicating the castle nut is too loose. I know that you don't want too much torque on the bearing and castle nut, but the wobble concerns me. Is this the correct procedure?
...
โMay-13-2016 03:33 AM
โMay-13-2016 02:49 AM
Bear Ghost wrote:
Or should I tighten the castle nut to get to the next available hole?
โMay-12-2016 09:18 PM
โMay-12-2016 04:50 PM
โMay-09-2016 08:10 AM
โMay-09-2016 07:42 AM
โMay-09-2016 03:12 AM