Clutch Bearing Maintenance
#1
Clutch Bearing Maintenance
Hi all,
I have just got a new lot of clutch bearings (10pk) and some ceramic ones as well.. I tried the ceramic ones and they dried up real quick after just 1 run at the park, they are still real smooth just dry
I am going to clean them all out and use a better lube as i think they have been either under lubed or sh1tty lube has been used...
what is better, using bearing oil or bearing grease?
I know the grease will last longer at the cost of more friction but i thought it might be better for clutch bearings...
If i use bearing oil, will the oil last the life of the bearings or will i need to oil them more than once? i am going to change them about every half gallon or so.
What type of oil do i need for the bearings?
til now i have been use a PFTE grease made by innox but its hard to get in these tiny bearings.
also how do you guys oil you bearings? just pop off the nylon shield and add a couple drops after i have blown out the old stuff or can you do it with the shield on?
thankyou!!
I have just got a new lot of clutch bearings (10pk) and some ceramic ones as well.. I tried the ceramic ones and they dried up real quick after just 1 run at the park, they are still real smooth just dry
I am going to clean them all out and use a better lube as i think they have been either under lubed or sh1tty lube has been used...
what is better, using bearing oil or bearing grease?
I know the grease will last longer at the cost of more friction but i thought it might be better for clutch bearings...
If i use bearing oil, will the oil last the life of the bearings or will i need to oil them more than once? i am going to change them about every half gallon or so.
What type of oil do i need for the bearings?
til now i have been use a PFTE grease made by innox but its hard to get in these tiny bearings.
also how do you guys oil you bearings? just pop off the nylon shield and add a couple drops after i have blown out the old stuff or can you do it with the shield on?
thankyou!!
#3
Tech Regular
iTrader: (17)
clutch
I agree with cheesecake, but being a titewad its hard to throw away good bearings.. I boil them in mobil 1 an reuse. I do this after a weekend of racing. yet to have a bearing failure. sure its a lot of extra work but I enjoy doing it and I"m saving a few bucks... good luck
#5
cheezeball is correct on this one...just use boca or avid -1.00 each and swap them out after every race... 2.00 is all it costs and if that is too much u are in the wrong hobby lol
#6
Tech Elite
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And since you really need to pull the motor to do that... why not just replace the bearings? Cheap insurance. There's nothing worse than the feeling of not finishing a race because of something like a bearing failure that you could have prevented.
#7
i just put in new ones.. i never worry about oil or grease. if they are gritty toss them IMO
#9
#10
I agree with Toiffel! TKO is the ticket! To clean and relube I pop one sheild out and use the sonic turbo wash tub sold at TKO and relube with a little Euraka lube also sold at TKO.
#11
#12
buy in packs of ten from walawala store on flea bay, remove all the grease then re-oil with acer sin lube, no clutch slip from lube been thrown over the clutch which always happened with greased bearings and the bearings are now supersonic
#13
Tech Champion
iTrader: (53)
I've used Avid revolutions since they came out and not had a single clutch bearing failure in that time......
I pull the yellow seal off and blow the grease out with either an air compressor or motor spray (I've ran them dry for years-no lube).... re-install seal and run them for about a gallon and throw them away. It doesnt matter which way you run the seal, I've ran them both and there's no difference in life.
The key to clutch bearing life if chassis flex and having enough fore and aft play. I run alot of play, 2-3mm and my car's chassis doesnt allow the clutch bell to hit the chassis. Not monitoring these 2 things will cost you a grundle in bearings....
Avid revolutions - dead reliable and cheap $1/ea
Ceramics for me have been nothing but problems
I pull the yellow seal off and blow the grease out with either an air compressor or motor spray (I've ran them dry for years-no lube).... re-install seal and run them for about a gallon and throw them away. It doesnt matter which way you run the seal, I've ran them both and there's no difference in life.
The key to clutch bearing life if chassis flex and having enough fore and aft play. I run alot of play, 2-3mm and my car's chassis doesnt allow the clutch bell to hit the chassis. Not monitoring these 2 things will cost you a grundle in bearings....
Avid revolutions - dead reliable and cheap $1/ea
Ceramics for me have been nothing but problems
#14
Good point Tony when meshing i cut a strip of paper from a normal A4 printer sheet just wider than the cb gears fold it in half then work it between spur and cb, push motor so cb is tight to spur tighten motor down remove paper you need to turn spur to get it out and you now have a well meshed cb/spur it works every time
#15
Tech Champion
iTrader: (53)
Good point Tony when meshing i cut a strip of paper from a normal A4 printer sheet just wider than the cb gears fold it in half then work it between spur and cb, push motor so cb is tight to spur tighten motor down remove paper you need to turn spur to get it out and you now have a well meshed cb/spur it works every time