Re: Flywheel Removal question
What Yepblaze said.<br /><br />I am an expert on how not to remove a flywheel, having broken a cast alloy one on a non-marine 2 stroke by cranking the puller down too tight. I managed to do this about the third or fourth time I removed it over a couple of days after I must have tightened it down too hard with the nut. Only a really skilled operator could manage to break a flywheel that way.<br /><br />After that (you always find out what you should have done after you've wrecked something doing it what seemed a reasonable way) an outboard engineer told me the best way to get it off is a combination of shock and pull, like Yepblaze said. Tighten the puller, then belt the centre shaft of the puller (which should be on the crankshaft end) real hard with a heavy hammer and the shock should release it. I've tried it a few times since and it works OK. <br /><br />Or you could upend the motor and drop it real hard on concrete on the crankshaft end, with the thread protected by a bolt, and keep doing it until the flywheel falls off (about a dozen or 15 times if I recall right). I got this tip from a non-genuine service manual on the engine I was working on. I don't know if the crankshaft was bent before I did it because I hadn't seen it at that stage, but it certainly was when I got it out. Also stuffed the thread on the crankshaft, which was an added bonus. I haven't used that method, or that manual, since. I got a genuine service manual for the motor later and, consistent with the principle that you only find out what you should have done after you've done something else, it specifically warns against dropping the crank end on hard surfaces, because it might damage things. I think I would stick with Yepblaze's methods.