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03-21-2012, 11:50 AM | #1 |
Rotary Fan in Training
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How to remove flywheel?
Does anybody have any good ideas on how to get the flywheel off? The engine is currently out of the car so I'm thinking bolt it back in so the other wrench isn't lifting the engine up off the floor... Any and all ideas are greatly appreciated!
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03-21-2012, 12:35 PM | #2 |
Rawr Bearclaw
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Best way is to use a flywheel lock tool which bolts to the upper part of the rear housing and keeps the flywheel from spinning. Otherwise get a couple friends to help secure the engine while you're breaking the flywheel nut loose, I've done that many times.
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03-21-2012, 12:44 PM | #4 |
Waffles - hmmm good
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I took some 2" angle iron, drilled holes to match the engine mount holes
on the front cover and bolted it on to stabilize the engine to get the front bolt out of the eccentric shaft. You can probably do the same trick with the angle iron on the flywheel as well.
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03-21-2012, 06:16 PM | #6 |
Home-brew Rotary
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If this is the first time the flywheel has been taken off the engine since the factory...
There are 2 issues. #1 getting the flywheel nut loose. #2 getting the flywheel off the e-shaft. With getting the Nut loose, there have been many tales of different ways to do it. All of which aren't a bad way to do it. If you can get it off that way, great. In my experience, I've had someone stand on the engine while I hit a breaker-bar (that's attached to the 2&1/4" socket) with a BFH. Then once you get the nut off, you might be surprised that the flywheel won't just pull off. So what I have done is hit the edges with a BFH, working it around in a cross pattern. You can use a peace of wood between the flywheel and BFH if your concerned with damage to the flywheel surface. After that it should pull off. Just putting my 2 cents in.
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03-21-2012, 07:21 PM | #7 |
The fan hit the shit!
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Get it loosened how ever you can. I have always used a impact or a flywheel locking tool and long ass pipe.
Then thread bolt back on a few threads, and then whack the shit outta the flywheel with a heavy heavy hammer. Make sure you do it evenly around the flywheel. The harmonics through out it will break it off the chamfer |
03-21-2012, 07:35 PM | #8 |
Rawr Bearclaw
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In an effort to keep from hurting the flywheel by banging on it, I choose to use a sacrificial e-shaft nut and bang on that with a sledge while prying the flywheel off with a large prybar. Even on a virgin flywheel, it takes about 4 good whacks and it pops right off. This has always worked great for me.
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Illicit Performance Rotary building, porting, tuning, chassis dyno services www.illicitperformance.com |
03-21-2012, 08:26 PM | #9 | |||
Test Whore - Admin
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03-22-2012, 11:33 AM | #11 |
RCC Addict
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Almost any impact gun - 1/2" or bigger - will get the flywheel nut off.
My Craftsman Pro *electric* impact gun has taken off flywheel nuts, and it's only rated at 250 lb.-ft. If the flywheel nut is stubborn, use some heat - i.e. torch - to help. Once the flywheel nut is loosen, it's just a matter of banging it with a hammer or equivalent. If you still can't do it, you need more muscles - don't blame the hammer. I've gotten the flywheel to loosen with a *regular* hammer - not a mini sledge. You need to just WAIL at the flywheel like you're going to kill it. Keep away from the clutch disc mating surface areas and the outside teeth (for the starter). Of course, all safety disclaimers apply here. Remember, the eccentric shaft end is tapered where it mates with the flywheel. Pounding it in - towards the engine - will cause the flywheel to bounce back off the taper. -Ted |
03-24-2012, 04:45 AM | #13 |
RCC Addict
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It's your typical lefty-loosey, righty-tighty thread.
It's not a reverse thread. -Ted |
03-25-2012, 01:17 AM | #15 |
Rotary Fan in Training
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Well after lots of grunting, sweating, and bleeding... we gave up and ended up using an impact. I bought a flywheel holding tool and it didn't help either. Man you guys weren't kidding! And of course, there was lots of beer drinking afterwards in celebration of removing said nut.
Thanks for all the help! |