The message to which you are about to reply is shown first. GO TO REPLY FORM



 VIEW    REPLY TO THIS MESSAGE    PRINT   SAVE 

How NOT to tear center bearing carrier? 200 1990



Hey guys, long time gone, but back to square one with my 90 wagon that is being pushed into service. Just retired my second 84 due to overseasoned streets here in OH. Nearly made the 400k mark. Gets old with these 240s, that just when everything seems to be running just right, the bottom falls out. Literally.

Still had a lot of life in her and I'll really miss her. However the fun now starts with my replacement 90 wagon that slept for a good decade waiting its turn. Decent shape but needs work to get road worthy before the salt trucks return. A bit more work then I thought actually so am a bit behind.

Eased into the routine stuff and now to more challenging matters. Needs a center bearing and carrier. Last time I did this, tore the side lip that holds the bearing trying to get it to seat. Screwdriver and cus words the entire time despite using silicone grease. Dang rubber was just too stiff and orifice too small...and these were Volvo parts. I could cook the rubber to soften it some but thats about the extent of my creative thinking on this one. Am hoping someone sees something different to speed things along that I'm missing.

Have all kinds of repeat adventures in store on the wagon and some I haven't experienced, so look forward to the new challenges as well as the education. AND, you can be sure that I will follow up and finalize every post. Thanks in advance for your input!






USERNAME
Use "claim to be" below if you don't want to log in.
PASSWORD
I don't have an account. Sign me up.
CLAIM TO BE
Use only if you don't want to login (post anonymously).
ENTER CAPTCHA CODE
This is required for posting anonymously.
OPTIONS notify by email
Available only to user accounts.
SUBJECT
MODEL/YEAR
MESSAGE

DICTIONARY
LABEL(S) +
IMAGE URL *
[IMAGE LIBRARY (UPLOAD/SELECT)]

* = Field is optional.

+ = Enter space delimited labels for this post. An example entry: 240 muffler


©Jarrod Stenberg 1997-2022. All material except where indicated.


All participants agree to these terms.

Brickboard.com is not affiliated with nor sponsored by AB Volvo, Volvo Car Corporation, Volvo Cars of North America, Inc. or Ford Motor Company. Brickboard.com is a Volvo owner/enthusiast site, similar to a club, and does not intend to pose as an official Volvo site. The official Volvo site can be found here.