The TRE puller I was referring to looks just like the C-shaped pitman arm puller, just smaller. Works the same way.
http://www.autozone.com/autozone/ca...&categoryDisplayName=Tools&_requestid=1612652
OEM / Pitman Tie Rod Arm Puller
Price: $12.00
Part Number: 27022
Weight: 1.75 lbs
Warranty: 1 YR
Job Use: Steering and Suspension
Features & Benefits:
A smaller design than the OEM #27016. For use on Compact cars and smaller Pitman Arm. Yoke is forged and heat treated with a 2 1/16 in. opening.
The OTC 7503 is the one I have my eye on. Not sure if I need it for removing the front axles, but I should probably have it on hand just in case.
BMW tie rods have a dimple at the top of the stud. This one looks like it's flat. I wonder if it would be a problem.

I'm thinking it's a cup on the end with the ***** in the middle ... at least that's the way I hope it is.![]()
How come the one OTC is almost as much as the whole set?
If you're speaking of the tool to separate the tie rod end from the knuckle I've always loosened the nut and hit the knuckle with a BFH. It distorts the tapered opening momentarily and allows the stud to drop down. This works on ball joints and drag and center links also. To remove the splined end of a pitman arm or the inner section of a rack tie rod yes use the appropriate tool.
You mean the one OTC puller verses the whole set from HF?
Autoace touched on this a while back ... he said you're paying for a lifetime warranty from OTC verses the 90 day from HF for the set.



Here's an E30 strut housing...more than likely what I would be working on now most of the time. See how small those attachment points are? Scares me when I've wailed on them before. Looks like I will need a C shaped puller for these. The brake shield is way to close to swing a normal too around the other side.....even if the tool was narrow enough to grasp the bottom without slipping off.


You mean the tie rod connects directly to the strut?
I think I'm lost now - I'm used to tie rods connecting to a steering knuckle - A.K.A. a spindle. I'm gonna wait for autoace to come rescue me from my confusion.![]()
Nothing beats the Stahlwille tie rod tool. It looks like a little nutcracker thing, but it will break loose a tie rod 100% of the time, without ever tearing a boot.
http://www.stahlwille-online.de/ind...hid=&scmd=pdetail&pcid=7023&cid=7025&pid=7125
While this claims to be a ball joint tool, I've never found a ball joint it worked on. On tie rods, it's truely fantastic. I've had this tool for about 25 years, and used it on dozens of BMWs.
I always thought those looked like an inferior design, with not enough pressure above the stud.
Snappy is calling that a pitman arm puller; which is the same thing only wider. If that 7315A fits around the tie rod stud, it would work beautifully.
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You got room to use that 7503 ?
Nope. Anyway, you can't really use Stahlwille and inferior design in the same sentence. As a Bimmerhead, you should know that. When I raced BMWs years ago, I had to pull tierods off every other week to deal with suspension stuff, and this tool never failed once.
BTW, I got mine from a BMW specialty shop.

$108.99 for a genuine OTC set is hellava good deal!!![]()