I have a confession to make.......
I broke my own cardinal rule when disassembling projects.
I will ALWAYS make a list of parts as I am tearing a project down so I know I have the parts when the project is going back together. I don't get nearly the shop time I want these days so I schedule my projects and time as efficiently as possible and nothing irritates me more than when I have a project going back together only to find out a small very specific bolt, shim, washer or something more major is holding up the project because of poor execution of my plan. I follow a very strict Seven "P" policy. Proper Prior Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance. Well, I poorly executed this one.
As I was tearing down the square body K10 a couple of weeks ago I made sure to write down such as grease seals for the front hubs as I was certain they would need to be replaced and bearings repacked. As I was tearing down the front spindles and bearings I noted a couple of the hub nuts had some burrs where the previous owner must have used a punch to tighten the nut rather than the proper four wheel drive nut socket. This is not acceptable but also not uncommon but I generally can walk over to the belt sander and touch up the edges on the belt and be good to go.
Well as I started cleaning parts on Friday evening to reassemble the front axle knuckles I saw that the spindles were in very poor condition and had the inner bearings spin on the spindle. This caused one to have a nasty groove worn into it and the other side wasn't far behind. Also the nuts were in much worse condition once I got them cleaned in the solvent tank. I could have kicked my own *** Friday night.
Luckily I called the owner, who has been great to do work for as he had expected some "surprises" on a 45+ year old truck. He was quick to locate and order new spindles and bearing kits. I guess I lucked out and hadn't really wasted any much time because the parts were readily available and should be here any time and I still had the rear axle to work on so it wasn't a total game stopper but still pissed me off that I broke my own rule.
This was the passenger side spindle that was the better of the two.
Driver's side bearing as I was removing the seal and bearing. Glad this failed in the shop rather than on the road. I think the cage was barely holding the rollers in the bearing.
Passenger's side bearings show some signs of spinning on the spindle and the cages are damaged slightly.
Driver's side spindle. Deep groove where the bearing had been spinning on the spindle for quite some time.
Now on to the rear axle....