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Sprocket bearing adjustment

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4 years 1 week ago #223652 by Rusty Iron
I've got a final drive sprocket bearing on my D6c that apears to need adjustment, and of course I don't have the special spanner tool used to tighten the bearing.
Looks like the tool is a 7F9306....is that correct?

Found a new one online for just under $300. For the few times I might need it that's plenty to invest.
Does anyone have a good backyard mechanic method of tightening the bearing without the proper tool?

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4 years 1 week ago #223653 by Rome K/G
Two men, two pry bars.

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4 years 1 week ago #223665 by Rusty Iron
Bar seemed to get it tight.... Thanks

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4 years 1 week ago #223674 by kittyman1
just curious, is there a torque spec for the sprocket bearing? or tolerance of movement?

- i'm more of a numbers guy...

always dropping GOLD, all you have to do is just pick it UP !

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4 years 1 week ago #223683 by Rusty Iron
The book says to use a 5' cheater bar and tighten it as tight as you can.
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4 years 1 week ago #223693 by kittyman1
okay thanks Rusty....that sounds TIGHT!

always dropping GOLD, all you have to do is just pick it UP !

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4 years 1 week ago #223694 by dpendzic
yes that is tight--could be 1000 ft-lbs if you sat on the end of the bar

D2, D3, D4, D6, 941B, Cat 15
Hancock Ma and Moriches NY

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4 years 1 week ago #223701 by trainzkid88
d4 6u the book say 1250ft/lb of torque on the outer spindle nut. ruff method 2 blokes, inch drive socket and bar, 6 foot of pipe and lean on it.
if you have a engineers black book you have the formula for calculating torque values according to handle length and force applied all you need is the formula, a spring balance scale and a method to apply said force.
a retired ships maintenance engineer showed me how to do it. he used it to do head bolts etc on big marine diesels without using the expensive hydraulic powered torque tools.

its simple really all your doing is shifting the point of measurement to the end of the lever instead of at the fastener.

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4 years 1 week ago #223702 by trainzkid88
otc tools make the c hook spanner and yes rather expensive. very simple tool though. i have considered making my own by getting the c hook laser cut out of 1/2 inch high strength steel plate such as bisalloy or strenx. which would cost less than the premade tool. i just havent got that far yet have to do the cad drawing first. better pull the finger out and do it.

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4 years 1 week ago #223716 by Deebo
Replied by Deebo on topic Sprocket bearing adjustment
OTC 7308 and 7309 are available nowadays to do the job but at a price.. I found a copy of a 1959 OTC tool catalogue online that had the same wrench as 7309 previously listed as CT-686. I kept an eye on eBay for this version and scored one for $66. Worth looking out for as there's no substitute for the correct tool, makes the job very straightforward and when I removed the adjusting nut from a parts machine so much quicker than a brass drift.



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