Same here,I never fit wheel bearings with clearance,I do them with the wheel on and spin them until I feel resistance and then back off the nut a touch. Pat
I disagree, I feel a taper roller bearing needs the tiniest bit of pre load.
The mid nineties Defender manual has a good set up procedure, I'd follow that.
Always set them up with pre load beginning with various Jeeps a very long time ago and never had a wheel bearing failure on any vehicle I've serviced.
Well packed bearings using very good high temp grease also goes a long way to a long life (if not using oil lubed bearings)
 OldBushie
					
					
						OldBushie
					
					
                                        
					
					
						Same here,I never fit wheel bearings with clearance,I do them with the wheel on and spin them until I feel resistance and then back off the nut a touch. Pat
Certainly with the RRC the hubs have a higher temperature expansion rate than the tubes that they mount on. When the brake discs heat the hubs the extra expansion takes up the play.
The workshop manual states that end float "must be .002" to.004" ", both for the front and rear bearings. Disagree with that.
Pat, isn't backing the nut off giving clearance?
And the pre fixed spacer Defender manual states to use 50Nm, back off 90* and then do up to 10Nm so there is no play and a tiny amount of pre-load.
As stated I've always used pre-load, whether it was a Jeep, Nissan, Toyota, Holden, Ford or a trailer and always had very, very good bearing life.
 OldBushie
					
					
						OldBushie
					
					
                                        
					
					
						^ what he said. Pat
Same for the fronts on the Puma?
I have to have a look at them soon,rears are oiled.
I would advise doing this yourself as it is great way of learning what is going on down there. All you need outside of a basic tool kit is the 52mm box spanner.
I have changed out bearings on a campsite before and it wasn't too much of an issue. Allow about an hour each side for re-packing. If you are replacing wheel bearings then maybe 1.5 hours.
As others have said, I tighten the locknut up tight and then back off a little to allow the wheel to spin freely but with no lateral movement.
Once you have done it yourself once you will know it has been done correctly and more importantly that the lock nut has been hand tightened not with a windy gun! That one I did in the campsite had to be chiselled offsince then I know that I have had all bearings replaced and I repack them once a year.
Bearings welding themselves to stub axles is not fun, I had that on my old 90. Look after them, they take a lot of punishment.
G
Okay so the mechanic at the landy care centre is away on holidays and the cairns landrover specialists cant fit me in.
I can get the spairs though. Maybe I will tackel it myself after all.
Just need to find a place to do it now. Not sure the caravan park would be too keen on letting me do it there...
 OldBushie
					
					
						OldBushie
					
					
                                        
					
					
						Have you pulled the axles and found out what the problem is?,they do have a habit of simply coming loose. Pat
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