
As for the price, I'll be $550 lighter when I leave the wreckers on Saturday morning

I hope!!!steptoe wrote:Cam came out of HSCibernation?
I hadn't thought of this one, I guess it is a possibility. Although one would hope they would have had some sort of quality control back in the factory to pick that kind of thing up. But then, it was the 1980's and these weren't expensive cars. I think I actually have another bearing hub with new bearings installed for that side, sitting in the shed un-used from when I went to L series stuff on the blue wagon, that might rule out the dud-machine job theory. Good to know about the EA82 DOJ's, I wonder though if it would then hit the steering shaft on that side. Probably not with the P/S uni joint in there.Phizinza wrote:Do you think the right front beating wearing out prematurely could be a machining fault in the knuckle, like perhaps it's machined so the bearings aren't perfectly pallarell to each other?
I've heard you can put EA82 DOJ cups on EA81 shafts, those are a bit longer, to help slow the opening up of the cup which causes the loose joint to click.
Tony, there is such a thing as too tight! See below...a picture of a stripped wheel nut.tony wrote:seeing as the steering has been vibrating since you have had the car I would suggest this has caused severe wear in the whole front steering and bearings etc, so the whole lot would now need replacement.
just standing on a breaker bar will not tighten the axle nut sufficiently, I use about a 4foot length of 50mm water pipe and am not sure that is enough. I suggest you borrow a large torque wrench an do the job properly, I think it is supposed to be done to about 220 ft lbs. the shop manual has the details.
When undoing the nut I had to put a car jack under the breaker bar and jack the car up on it, and it nearly lifted the car up!
showthread.php?t=25973Silverbullet wrote:I worked out where the noise was coming from, full write up in the general section.