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Help me with what tool I need to pull this....

Fyrme

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Nov 28, 2012
Messages
2,231
Location
Green country, Oklahoma
I've got a heavy duty job site compressor that was given to me with a rod Knock. It runs and builds pressure great, but knocks like a mother. I've got the case and head off of it, exposing the piston rod and balance shaft. The rod bearing has tons of slop in it, and I imagine that's the problem. However, I can't figure out how to get the pressed on bearing off the shaft. The is only about .020-.030 room between the rod and balancer, so a conventional puller is not gonna work.

My question is, what would the factory use to separate the rod from the shaft :headscratch:1522937842870.jpg1522937887673.jpg

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Fyrme

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2012
Messages
2,231
Location
Green country, Oklahoma
I've got a heavy duty job site compressor that was given to me with a rod Knock. It runs and builds pressure great, but knocks like a mother. I've got the case and head off of it, exposing the piston rod and balance shaft. The rod bearing has tons of slop in it, and I imagine that's the problem. However, I can't figure out how to get the pressed on bearing off the shaft. The is only about .020-.030 room between the rod and balancer, so a conventional puller is not gonna work.

My question is, what would the factory use to separate the rod from the shaft :headscratch:1522937842870.jpg1522937887673.jpg

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Oh, and the shaft is fairly soft. I already tried a wedge behind it and a brass hammer on the shaft, and you can see it smashed the alignment tab a bit. I then changed to a plastic dead blow hammer with no luck.

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Wamsutta

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Jan 8, 2014
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Amarillo, Texas
You need a bearing splitter to start with to get the bearing up off the surface and then use a pulling bar attachment to pull on the bearing splitter. You see those threaded holes in the bearing splitter? The pulling bar adapter threads into those holes.

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jeffer949

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Sep 8, 2017
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80
^^^^wont work. The connecting rod would get in the way. The bearing is probably locked in place with a locking compound. Best way to get it off is to heat it up. Heat up the bearing with a propane torch and I bet it would let go. Yes you will ruin the bearing but you will replace it anyway.
 

Wamsutta

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Jan 8, 2014
Messages
10,852
Location
Amarillo, Texas
^ Alright, how about a pry bar with a striking cap? It'd be a heck of a lot cheaper than a bearing splitter set anyway.
 
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larry_g

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Apr 28, 2007
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Location
oregon
Me, I'd drill and tap those three dimples and use some screws to jack it off the shaft. The last compressor I was in like that, Dewalt, I was able to buy the cylinder and rod/piston/bearing assy as a rebuild kit so destroying the rod would be of no consequence. Even drill and tapping the 3 dimples would have little consequence if reusing the rod. At worst you might have to remove a bit of metal from the counterweight of the crank.

lg
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Fyrme

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Joined
Nov 28, 2012
Messages
2,231
Location
Green country, Oklahoma
Thanks guys. I used heat to get the rod off the bearing, then a puller and some heat to get the bearing off. I don't know why I almost always forget that option. I've used heat for tons of things, but anytime I have something new, i never think about using it.
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