anyone do this and/or can recommend someone (or a particular shop) that can do this? thoughts on cost?i don't know much about it...it's my brother's car (1999 saturn SL) and he said he needs the bearings replaced on both of the front wheels...he already has the bearings
5/25/2012 11:26:34 AM
are they press-in or bolt on bearings. bolt on is easy peasy press-in sucks!
5/25/2012 11:29:25 AM
press-in, i think...he has a friend who he works on his car with and his friend said he didn't have the equipment to do itthis is all second-hand, so if something i say doesn't make sense, let me knowmaybe he doesn't have the press: http://www.saturnfans.com/forums/showthread.php?t=168256
5/25/2012 11:53:17 AM
I've had one go bad on the Integra. theDuke866 and I tried to replace it to no avail. I went to a shop though, and since I already had the bearing he did it for $90.Some of the best money I've ever spent (it was a huge bitch). Oh, and on the Integra it was bolt on.
5/25/2012 12:29:41 PM
it's not very difficult with the right equipment
5/25/2012 12:45:13 PM
The Porsche 944 has press in. I threw the hubs in the oven for about 30 minutes, used a brass punch to take out the old and a bearing plate the hammer in the new. Took some muscle, but was not hard.[Edited on May 25, 2012 at 12:51 PM. Reason : .]
5/25/2012 12:50:55 PM
if it's anything like the Cavaliers it should be a bolt-in unit bearing(1) axle captive nut(3) flange boltsswap new one in and reverse the process
5/25/2012 1:42:11 PM
I am interested in this as well. Need the rear two bearings replaced in a 97 Ram. Apex Auto Works quoted me $130 to do it (I supply parts).
5/25/2012 4:41:25 PM
^That's a fair price for a few hours of shop work, the shafts are a little bulky and not conducive to working on in a jimmy-rigged press without damaging the splines or marring the shaft smoothness near the seal area. Call around some more and you might get someone to do it for $100ish.
5/25/2012 6:57:50 PM