V/P 290-DP PDS Dual Bearing R&R + Alignment

Jersey13

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Mar 18, 2001
Messages
101
Hey all. I'm replacing the PDS bearings/snap rings and seals on a 290-DP. For some reason, the rear bearing failed within 3 years and i'm thinking the alignment may have been off. Timken bearings (purchased through iBoats) were used and the PDS was pumped with grease religiously.

1 - Can someone please tell me what the approx 1" space is for - see below from my crude artwork - that has the "?" between the 2 large snap rings, aft side? Is it to hold some grease behind the aft bearing before it gets pushed out when doing a "grease replacement" when pumping the zerk during maintenance? If i have this drawing incorrect, please let me know. I am aware there is another smaller snap ring that goes behind aft bearing, just couldn't draw it in nicely without confusion and also that both seals face the same way so that grease can escape through the aft seal during maintenance.

2 - From the many posts I've read, please let me know if i have the engine/flywheel cover/transom shield alignment procedure correct or missing something. Bolt the flywheel cover to the engine, slide this unit back lining up the 6 bolts that go through the transom into the flywheel cover, lower unit to rest on the motor mounts, tighten the 6 bolts evenly to 35ft lbs, adjust unit left/right/up/down to achieve no more than a 2mm difference between the 3 alignment bosses (located @ 3, 9, 12 o'clock) between the transom shield and flywheel cover, install and tighten motor mount lag bolts, recheck alignment boss spaces, re-adjust motor mounts if necessary.

Thanks in advance for any and all help,
Jersey
 

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Jersey13

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Mar 18, 2001
Messages
101
Did I confuse everyone? LOL. Any info would be appreciated.

Thanks.
 

muc

"Retired" Association of Marine Technicians...
Joined
Jul 7, 2004
Messages
2,170
Why they failed after 3 years is the big question. Normally these bearings last much longer. Most failures are due to water. After replacing the bad ones you need to try and determine if failure was caused by lack of lubricant or overloading (misalignment). The shaft shouldn't have any play in any direction but still spin freely.

1. No idea, but to me it Really doesn't matter why the space is there.

2. Yes it sound like you have the correct alignment procedure.

During disassembly were all the snap rings still in place?
 

Jersey13

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Mar 18, 2001
Messages
101
Thanks for the info Muc. No water evidence in flywheel housing, bearings greased regularly and all snap rings were in place. Seems the front bearing was the one that was growling. No real lateral play in the shaft with the old bearings, we could just hear something wasn’t right. Putting it all back together today, paying particular attention to the alignment. I figured the aft bearing would fail first if the alignment was off when they were replaced 3 years ago but, I’m guessing/hoping that either could fail just as easy.

Thanks again for your help,
Jersey
 
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