Today I had to remove a broken wheel stud from the rear hub of a Subaru. (A tire shop, or maybe the dealer, crossthreaded the lug nut, and it jammed and torqued off when I tried to remove the nut.) I did what I've always done: knocked it out with a hammer, and pulled a new one through the hole with a lug nut.
Later on, I got curious and googled this task. Maybe two-thirds of the results recommended this same procedure. The others recommended pressing it out with a tie rod end remover or the like, on the grounds that the hammer blows will damage the wheel bearing. (One of them also recommended you throw away the lug nut you use to pull the new stud through, in the belief that it will stretch the threads. Why it would damage the nut, but not the new stud, is not explained, but I digress.)
In this particular case I think I would still have used a hammer, rather than disassemble the tiny-toons drum brake Subaru uses for a parking brake in order to get a pressing tool onto the back of the hub. And I feel like if a wheel bearing can take 100k miles of road shocks to the hub, it can probably take a couple of hammer shocks too. You don't really have to hit it all that hard. But am I wrong? Is the hammer actually not a good idea?
Later on, I got curious and googled this task. Maybe two-thirds of the results recommended this same procedure. The others recommended pressing it out with a tie rod end remover or the like, on the grounds that the hammer blows will damage the wheel bearing. (One of them also recommended you throw away the lug nut you use to pull the new stud through, in the belief that it will stretch the threads. Why it would damage the nut, but not the new stud, is not explained, but I digress.)
In this particular case I think I would still have used a hammer, rather than disassemble the tiny-toons drum brake Subaru uses for a parking brake in order to get a pressing tool onto the back of the hub. And I feel like if a wheel bearing can take 100k miles of road shocks to the hub, it can probably take a couple of hammer shocks too. You don't really have to hit it all that hard. But am I wrong? Is the hammer actually not a good idea?



