that doesnt look like stuck hardware or raceway to me...
This would be my approach.I have had good success with carving a groove in it as deep as i can without getting the stem, and then giving it a good hard smack with a heavy chisel and hammer. That will crack the race and make it easy to slide off. Very gentle with the Dremel tho.
And save the old race to press the new one on.This would be my approach.
@bigpoppa
I'm not too far from you if you want to borrow a dremel, or a grinder with a metal cutting blade if you're feeling brave.
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I have had good success with carving a groove in it as deep as i can without getting the stem, and then giving it a good hard smack with a heavy chisel and hammer. That will crack the race and make it easy to slide off. Very gentle with the Dremel tho.
Don't bother freezing it... heat transfer in thin steel tube being what it is.....mechanics can teach perseverance
have you given it a good soak in penetrating oil ? maybe even overnight?
you can freeze the entire thing, and then use the propane torch to heat up only the race,
avoid heating the stem, and keep the heat directed and moving around the race
cool toolI am thinking a splitter is the right tool for that race. Turns it into a safe job that only takes a few seconds.
Don't bother freezing it... heat transfer in thin steel tube being what it is.....
But apply a liberal amount of heat, use a propane torch it won't get too hot, hold it upside down and SLAM it down on a piece of wood and that bearing will fall off.
Failing that, cut TWO grooves as deep as you dare to go, if you ding the tube it's no big deal, and the internal stress in that bearing that is PRESSED on will snap it, and it fall off.
... but yeah, this is why they make bearing pullers.
How are installing the new ones? With a hammer?
Can't make that out for sure in the photo, is the top part of the steering stem smaller or larger then the bottom bearing?