I should have the attachment housing on it's opening and the auger, gearbox and impeller disconnected from the housing and suspended by its own weight before striking, yes?
Sorry my post are so long. What your trying to do can sometimes be a difficult process. The outcome will hopefully be that you're able to get the hub off without
damaging anything else.
Yes, roll the housing onto it's front side. The pulley would then be on top, you'd be looking down at it.
Yes you can remove the bolts on both sides that screw into the ends of the auger shaft. Then remove the three bolts on each side that hold the auger bushing
flanges to the blower housing. Then remove the flanges. It might be easier to remove the flanges with the housing before you roll it up on it's face.
Once the flanges are off and the housings rolled up on it's face. Check to make sure that there is some space between the augers and the floor. If there are
resting on the floor. You will need to raise the entire housing up, just slide a piece of wood under each side of the housing. You want the augers, gear case,
impeller shaft and impeller to be kind of dangling from the pulley hub. You don't need to raise the housing way just enough so that the augers aren't in contact
with the floor 1/2" 3/4". If possible try and find something that you can use to slide under or in between the pulley hub and the housing / bearing flanges.
Two pieces of steel, flat steel bar, one leg of a piece of angle iron. There is not much room which is the problem. But having something under there helps support
the hub. So that when you hit on the shaft. The energy isn't absorbed by the give in the bearing below and the flex of the housing. In a perfect world you would want the
hub to be solid in place to it can't move down when the shaft is struck. Your trying to drive the shaft down and out of the hub. If the hub moves down with the shaft when
you hit it. Not much is being accomplished.
It's also possible that the impeller shaft is also frozen in the impeller bearing inner race.
If it's not, then the whole assembly could and hopefully will just drop out of the pulley hub. If it is frozen you need to know that when you start banging on the
end of the shaft inside the pulley hub. A lot of the impact is going to be absorbed by the bearing the bearing flange and the housing around that area.
So depending on how hard you decide to continue hitting it. You could bend or distort the bearing flanges themselves. I think they are around $10.00 or less for the pair.
So in the process keep that in the back of your mind. Remember your just looking for the pulley hub to move a little 1/8 or 3/16 of an inch. When it does roll the housing back
down and tap it back on that amount. Work it back an forth using some type of lube in the key way slot and set screw holes as you go. When it starts to move a little freer
you can attempt to drive it a little further off. Next time it's up on the front of the housing. Don't let the augers ever just rest on the floor. They need room to drop as the hub
starts to come off. Also, as you go make sure that the auger shaft is not getting hung up in the housing holes on either side. The last 1/2 before the hub comes off can
sometimes be where it get really tight again. You may have to hit the shaft pretty hard. But not like your driving in a railroad spike. Don't mushroom the end of the shaft.
If you get it to the point where the hub is sliding off. Before you take it all the way off. I would roll the housing of it's face. And then remove the hub from the shaft entirely.
That way you can then pull everything out the front of the housing rather than having it falling out as you are rolling it of it's face. You can use a puller on the hub if you get it
moving back and forth on the shaft. I sometimes use one to get the hub off that last 1/4 to 3/8. But I try and get the hooks of the puller on the hubs... hub.
Not on the ears. Use the ears
only if it doesn't take much effort to get the hub to move when tightening the puller. Or you will break one off. Good Luck!
This message was modified Nov 6, 2011 by jrtrebor