Gimbel Bearing Replacement

Hagan

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
May 31, 2009
Messages
41
I have a 1996 Volvo Penta SX Cobra outdrive. The gimbel bearing is shot. I see the slot at the top and the bottom and am trying to spin the bearing. There appears to be a seal behind it, not allowing the bearing to spin to the slots. Can anyone help me to how it comes out?
 

Bondo

Moderator
Staff member
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Apr 17, 2002
Messages
71,088
Re: Gimbel Bearing Replacement

Can anyone help me to how it comes out?

Ayuh,.....Pull the carrier with the bearing....Straight out with a puller....
 

Hagan

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
May 31, 2009
Messages
41
Re: Gimbel Bearing Replacement

The bearing is about an inch deep and "carrier" behind it appears to be the same. Am I looking at the right thing? Both of those need to come out? And is there a bearing puller or can I use a wheel puller? If it is a bearing puller where can I get them and if there are sizes... any ideas what I need? Any more help would be greatly appreciated.
 

pinecrestwoods

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Jun 17, 2009
Messages
100
Re: Gimbel Bearing Replacement

I feel your pain- I just replaced mine yesterday. I'm thinking you're not sure what you're looking at. Do a simple google image search for "gimble bearing." I'm not sure if the volvo and merc outdrives use a different kind of bearing, however- someone will know that. My merc required a "slide hammer" bearing puller ("blind puller") (that hooks on the inside of the bearing and yanks it out)- the inside diameter of my bearing was approx. 1 1/4". I got mine out with a dinky little 3lb. slide hammer- it did require a little more work than a heavier one would. The bearing is approx. 1" deep, and with its "carrier," the whole bearing assembly is fairly large in diameter (3 or 4", I suppose???). It all gets replaced as a unit.

The slots you refer to don't impact removal- I think they're just for looks. ;)

Yank it out. If there is a grease zerk that feeds that area (I assume you have one) pump some new grease through it, so there is no chance of old funky wet grease contaminating your new bearing. Clean the area up, and carefully drive in your new bearing- take your time with it and go in straight. You can use a pvc plumbing fitting to gently and evenly drive it in. ONLY "DRIVE" AGAINST THE OUTER RACE... NOT on the inner race.

***Before you drive it in, rotate the thin metal outer band (the one that compresses to hold the bearing in place) and locate the hole that lets grease into the bearing- line that up with your grease zerk. (This is assuming your new bearing will take grease, and is not a "sealed bearing").

I perhaps jumped the gun, considering you're talking about a volvo, and I'm referring to a merc. If I'm totally off, someone will say "Disregard what that fool said." I'm just trying to give you some reference as you begin your journey. Do a bunch of reading/searching on here.

You also need to address any other "issues" at this point. Did you have water in your bellow when you opened it up? Is your bearing rusty? Pics are always helpful, as there are plenty of keen eyes that will help you identify any potential issues.
 

Hagan

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
May 31, 2009
Messages
41
Re: Gimbel Bearing Replacement

Once again... THANK YOU... The slide hammer did the trick. Straight out and practically effortless. As far as disregarding what you said. The bearing is identical in both the merc and volvo. Thank you for the detailed step by step instructions as they were priceless. No water, no rust, and the noise that was scaring me a bit is gone. Had plans to go out today and meet friends on the river, at the begining of the week I was wondering If I'd make it...This morning..... I'm a happy guy! Thanks again.
 
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