hunterlord
New member
do you think i can do a legacy outback rear wheel bearing in my driveway? seems like i could? has anyone any experience with this?
http://www.cars101.com/recalls.htmlSubaru. has initiated an Extended Warranty Program for Rear Wheel Bearings on certain 2005 and early 2006 model year Legacy and Outback models. Coverage will be extended to 8 years or 100,000 miles.
During a quality review, Subaru discovered that there is a possibility that one or both of an affected vehicle's Rear Wheel Bearings may, over time, develop a noise condition that causes the bearing to produce a whining sound. This sound does not pose a safety issue and does not adversely affect the normal operation of the bearing. However, if the vehicle experiences this condition, it should be corrected by replacing the affected bearing, which will eliminate the sound. As a result of this finding and in the interest of customer satisfaction, SOA is extending the Rear Wheel Bearing warranty coverage period for the affected vehicles to 8 years (96 months) or 100,000 miles, whichever occurs first.
Technical Service Bulletin number 03-58-08
short answer (unless you've done it before and know the trix and have the right bearing puller, socket and mallet) is, "no"...i can do a legacy outback rear wheel bearing in my driveway?
my fronts at some point i'm sure. so the passenger side thread on the axle shaft is clockwise righty tighty... is the drivers side the same or a reversed thread? i could see myself breaking something with a 6'pipe on a breaker bar! the nut i removed from the passenger side came off with an impact gun@180psi real easy. its popping that dimple round that sucks. what do you guys do to make getting that dimple at the edge of the lock nut round befor you spin it free?congrats on a job well done....now you can move onto pressed bearings!!!!! pb blaster is the POOP!!!!
hunter, good on yer for tackling teh bearing job. +1 for mainer's DIY-ness to a big degree.my fronts at some point i'm sure. so the passenger side thread on the axle shaft is clockwise righty tighty... is the drivers side the same or a reversed thread? i could see myself breaking something with a 6'pipe on a breaker bar! the nut i removed from the passenger side came off with an impact gun@180psi real easy. its popping that dimple round that sucks. what do you guys do to make getting that dimple at the edge of the lock nut round befor you spin it free?
c'est correct, mon amiso righty tighty lefty loosey all around on the axle shaft threads? thanks h