tyyost
Well-known member
I have a 2002 Focus that is making the wheel bearing rumble. Thinking this may be the time to pick up a smaller shop press.
Hf has their 10 and 20 ton on sale this month. This may be the first job that I can't figure out how to get around using a press for. I can get timken bearings alone for $40 each, or a hub kit for $80. Skipping the hub kit and just doing the bearings alone can save the cost of the 10 Ton press. Checking clist for a few months and no good deals, just hf stuff for retail prices.
I could always plan for a quick Saturday tear down and run down to the local shop for them to press everything apart and back together. Ideally I would like to handle the whole job here and take my time cleaning up everything n the front end for the winter season instead of running all morning.
Thoughts?
Hf has their 10 and 20 ton on sale this month. This may be the first job that I can't figure out how to get around using a press for. I can get timken bearings alone for $40 each, or a hub kit for $80. Skipping the hub kit and just doing the bearings alone can save the cost of the 10 Ton press. Checking clist for a few months and no good deals, just hf stuff for retail prices.
I could always plan for a quick Saturday tear down and run down to the local shop for them to press everything apart and back together. Ideally I would like to handle the whole job here and take my time cleaning up everything n the front end for the winter season instead of running all morning.
Thoughts?
But yeah, presses are a little scary to work with... Especially when you don't have proper press tools. I have a 20 ton HF press that I bought pretty much just to do my AK-47 project. Romanian AK kits are well known for having stubborn barrel pins, and it took a long time to get it out. Soaking in kroil, freezing, hammering on the press... And I broke a couple of tools trying to do it. And I got pretty darn paranoid about it after that first one snapped in half and went flying. I would almost think some kind of shield around the press would be a good idea. But then watching the whole press flex and move gets scary as well - you don't notice it as much when putting the pressure on, but as soon as you release pressure and it happens fast you realize that these things are pretty flimsy. I suppose it's fine for light hobby use, but I do wonder about it sometimes. That said, it has done the job... So really it comes down to how much use it will get, and doing what, and how much room you have and what your budget is. A lot of people have done some pretty wild modifications to the HF presses - welding together the main pieces, adding rollers and spacers to keep everything aligned... If you have the money, and expect to use it a lot, I'd say go for a better unit. Otherwise I'd say that for the occasional light use the HF model will do OK.