I have a odd feeling that there isn't much broken in mine when I pull it apart.
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JamesDowning wrote:Three things.
Your grease looks pretty good. What was the reason for your rebuild? Normally extreme wear ends up turning the grease totally black.
You suggest using a screw driver to pop the tripod housing back into the assembly. Where do you put your screwdriver head? I don't recall any location on the tripod housing that would allow this.
On your last image, the 4 nubs in the aluminum housing are ground down. That might pose a problem for the assembly in the future. One potential fix is to drill a blind hole, run a screw into the hole, and grind off the head in order to simulate a new nub. Grinding might be difficult though, without a dremmel.
dvanbramer88 wrote:The large aluminum "drum" piece that goes against the disconector on the CV. There are those small ridges on the 3 "sides" of it. You can get a flat blade to catch the ridge and tap with a hammer. I spent an hour beating the end of the CV and nothing was working. My neighbor suggested using a screw driver against that ridge and it popped right in second hit.
http://www.cardone.com/Imagesftp/60/601345-01.jpg
The middle image of the CV, see the ridges on the aluminum piece?
dvanbramer88 wrote:No problem. I went to my neighbor's shop to borrow a BFH because mine wasn't doing it. He grabbed a CV out of his trash pile and showed me where to hit it instead. My biggest problem was that if the CV isn't perfectly in line, when you hit it, the joint takes up most, if not all of the hit. Using this method, the position of the CV doesn't matter, and a lot less force is required.