Pressing Out The Stub Axle?

Started by Duk, May 30, 2017, 02:45:21 PM

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Duk

Has anyone ever pressed out a stub axle from the spindle/upright? They are definitely a 2 piece design, but I'd like to know the likelyhood of damage when doing it cold and an idea of the required force to do it.
The Daily: Jumped Up Taxi (BF F6 Typhoon). Oh the torque! ;)
The Slightly More Imediate Project: Supercharged Toyota MR2.
The Long Standing Conundrum: 1990 75 V6 (Potenziata)............. What to do, what to do???

Mick A

If you have a problem with a worn or damaged stub axle, my advice is to throw the upright away and replace it with another. Not worth the risk.

Mick.

Colin Byrne

100% agree with Mick, the bending moments that go through stub axles are huge, and a failure is going to be catastrophic, just find a replacement, there are plenty around. The 105 stub axles aren't the stiffest in the world to begin with (we run a large "crush tube" between the 2 bearings to stiffen them up and help with brake knock back). I had a brand new stub axle fail on an open wheeler once, the cause was as simple as not having a large enough radius on an edge, the result was a very damaged vehicle that took us months to repair, but luckily no injury.

cheers
72' 105 2000 GTV Red (tarmac rally/race car)
74' 105 2000 GTV Blue (road car)
68' 105 1600 Giulia Super White (Not sure yet)
01' Nissan Pathfinder (Tow car/Alfa support vehicle)

LaStregaNera

Quote from: Colin Byrne on May 31, 2017, 08:56:01 AM
we run a large "crush tube" between the 2 bearings to stiffen them up and help with brake knock back

I vaguely recall seeing someone who manufactured these - or did you machine your own?
66 GT Veloce
Bimota SB6

Colin Byrne

yea we ended up machining our own, they have to be very accurate so we also got some shims made up in case we need to change wheel bearings when we don't have access to a lathe, that said last time i changed wheel bearings there was need for adjustment anyway
72' 105 2000 GTV Red (tarmac rally/race car)
74' 105 2000 GTV Blue (road car)
68' 105 1600 Giulia Super White (Not sure yet)
01' Nissan Pathfinder (Tow car/Alfa support vehicle)

Duk

Alrighty.
My interest in removing stub axles is so I can either machine the original ones or machine new ones to suit Series 4/5 RX7 Turbo wheel hubs.
This is intended to be a bit of a combination of parts. RX7 hubs on 105 spindles installed in a 75.
I'm looking to use 105 spindles in a 75 because of their bolt on steering arms. I want to have faster steering (fewer turns lock to lock). To get the 75 to a 2.5 turn lock to lock steering instead of 3.25, I'd need steering arms about 30mm (I did do the maths, but can't remember exactly) shorter than the 75 arms.
This will work so long as having the track rod at a slight angle forward doesn't ruin Ackerman angle behavior.

105 stub axles are larger in diameter and longer than the 75 stub axles.
The Daily: Jumped Up Taxi (BF F6 Typhoon). Oh the torque! ;)
The Slightly More Imediate Project: Supercharged Toyota MR2.
The Long Standing Conundrum: 1990 75 V6 (Potenziata)............. What to do, what to do???

LaStregaNera

I doubt you'll have much luck pressing them out. I recall someone tried to press out the 116 stubs - deformed the axle and maxed the press without moving anything.
Bearing swap? Custom hubs?
These are the guys I saw who did the bearing spacers - they also do a big bearing hub conversion:
http://www.msfracingcomponents.com.au/bigbearingfronthubs/
http://www.msfracingcomponents.com.au/stubstiffenerbearingspacers/

I note they don't appear to list the stiffner for the 105 anymore (or maybe my memory is fuzzy and they never did it?), and just realised they have a picture of a 116 stub...
66 GT Veloce
Bimota SB6

Duk

I have a little 12t press at home.

But there are much bigger presses at work!  ;)

My reasons for looking into this are written above.
The Daily: Jumped Up Taxi (BF F6 Typhoon). Oh the torque! ;)
The Slightly More Imediate Project: Supercharged Toyota MR2.
The Long Standing Conundrum: 1990 75 V6 (Potenziata)............. What to do, what to do???

LaStregaNera

66 GT Veloce
Bimota SB6

Colin Edwards

Might the stub axle be shrunk into the upright?

I'd only be guessing at the Class Of Fit, however given the criticality of the joint, heating the upright and cooling the spindle would make sense.
Present
2023 Tonale Veloce
2018 Abarth 124 Spider
1987 75 3.0

Past
2020 Giulietta Veloce
2015 Giulietta QV
2009 159 3.2 Ti Q4
2012 Giulietta TCT Veloce
2006 147 Ti 2 door Selespeed
1979 Alfasud Ti 1.5

LaStregaNera

Quote from: Colin Edwards on June 08, 2017, 04:44:45 PM
Might the stub axle be shrunk into the upright?

I'd only be guessing at the Class Of Fit, however given the criticality of the joint, heating the upright and cooling the spindle would make sense.
It most definitely would be shrunk. I suspect the only way to get the stub out is to bore it out till the shrink fit collapses.
66 GT Veloce
Bimota SB6