I have the manuals. Will investigate tools. ThxIt is DIY but you will need some special tools and the service manual
Look in the manual it will list tools neededI have the manuals. Will investigate tools. Thx
As AD mentioned at one end of bellows is drive at other end is gimbal bearing there is a drain hole near gimbal that any gear oil or water that gets in there will leak into bilge. Conversely if the bilge gets really full of water it can also back fill the bellowsIs the bellows sealed at the transom? If so, how did the bilge get loaded with lube oil?
Thanks! I re-did the heads on the engine last year - two valves had tuliped. I read through the manual and it looks straight forward. Also checked out a couple of videos. I feel confident I can do it. Looks like I will need "retainer nut wrench" tool, o-ring, and oil seal and some specific greases and lubricants. Still studying up on pretensions the nut. AD mentioned checking tolerance - are there specific that I should look for?As AD mentioned at one end of bellows is drive at other end is gimbal bearing there is a drain hole near gimbal that any gear oil or water that gets in there will leak into bilge. Conversely if the bilge gets really full of water it can also back fill the bellows
Is it an easy job ? If you have the tools and skills yes. Also a factory manual helps. If considering doing it your self get a manual read through it and determine if it is doable.
Other thing is it may be worth it to reseal the entire drive depending on age condition and previous work done. If water got in bellows can rust the input yoke causing this seal to leak.
I had an alpha drive prop shaft pick up fishing line last fall. By the time I got into it and found a pitted bearing I ended up doing most of the bearings and all the seals. Needed a few drive specific tools.
If you are a gear head and have rebuilt engines, trans, swapped rear end gears it’s no issue. If changing brake pads is the limit of your experience would think taking the drive somewhere and having them pressure test and do what ever resealing it needs is a good option
Ok. I'll study up on that.Rolling torque is 3-7 lb/in for used bearings
Best practice is to use a 0-30 lb/in dial torque wrench following protocol outlined in the factory service manual
Ime that is the most critical part of the process
Don't skip the +/- offset on the gear/race upon reassembly
Yes
As stated it's outlined in the fsm
Mercury actually knows how to repair their products with the proper parts and tools as described in their manuals
complete transparency of what you need to do to service
I have the seals and bearing kit on their way. I'm still confused why the bearings have to be removed but that's what the manual says. Next need is a dial in-lb torque wrench with the proper range - that an expensive tool for a 1 time use (I hope). I have a click in-lb torque wrench that has been verified but that doesn't seem to be the right tool (accuracy issues).With hand drawn pictures, artiststry included from oem
The bearings are bigger than the ID of the seal so on the yoke the seal goes on first then the two bearings tightened down until you get the correct rolling torque.I have the seals and bearing kit on their way. I'm still confused why the bearings have to be removed but that's what the manual says. Next need is a dial in-lb torque wrench with the proper range - that an expensive tool for a 1 time use (I hope). I have a click in-lb torque wrench that has been verified but that doesn't seem to be the right tool (accuracy issues).
The u-joint assembly isn't pulling out completely. The o-ring is visible but the unit won't pull out any further. I'm not sure how to get force on it to pull it out. Are there any tricks to getting it out?No
But it will give you a chance to clean and inspect the entire upper driveshaft housing assy. The only other seals replacable aside from the yoke seal are the shift shaft seals and there's not often failure/need to replace them, everything else is o ring sealed. Also, going back together it'll be easier to verify the +/- offset alignment of the fwd/rev gears
I wouldnt be concerned on either. Would look in the housing -if the aluminum casting is scored up or it is really loose with some play you are ok. If it is loose I have staked housings like this to create a raised area to tighten up the fit as a last resortReseated the assembly and was able to remove it without heating! Thx. One of the races is slightly burnished - and there is some rust on the spliced end into the engine - are these concerns?