- Joined
- Feb 17, 2023
- Messages
- 55
- Reaction score
- 10
- Location
- Virginia
- My Car
- 73 Mach 1
351C Q car
C6 trans
With a pulley puller/installer like you see in my pic. This was from Harbor Freight and cost about 20 bucks. I've done 5 pulleys with it and no signs of it falling apart yet.I hate to even ask, but how are you going to remove that pulley?
Ah, now I see what you mean, there is no groove to use the proper pulley puller. He'll have to use a regular type puller If it will fit the gap between the pulley and bracket. The 1/2 gap on a stock pulley is too small for a reg puller.I hate to even ask, but how are you going to remove that pulley?
A saw will work !!Yep, this Scott Drake is a pos. No groove either side. No way it will work. Original was damaged. I can get a standard pulled on it.
FYI 73Mach: Just measured my March Alumnium PS pulley. The fitment dimensions matches with Stanglover's factory pulley pretty much exactly.Yep, this Scott Drake is a pos. No groove either side. No way it will work. Original was damaged. I can get a standard pulled on it.
Is this the pulley you have?FYI 73Mach: Just measured my March Alumnium PS pulley. The fitment dimensions matches with Stanglover's factory pulley pretty much exactly.
My original invoice states March #502 and has the "collar" for the removal tool to grasp. Looks like March now does away with the collar and uses three tapped holes for the removal tool.Is this the pulley you have?
https://marchperformance.com/ford-corporate-power-steering-single-groove-v-belt-pulley-502-c.html
So, I get the removal with three screw holes, but how do they intend to draw the pulley onto the shaft? You can't press it on, it has to be in effect, pulled on. If you try to press it on, you will without doubt screw up the pump internals. Perhaps there is a specialty tool needed similar in practice to the one I show.My original invoice states March #502 and has the "collar" for the removal tool to grasp. Looks like March now does away with the collar and uses three tapped holes for the removal tool.
Interesting. It would do at a pinch, but the kit has a bearing and thrust washer for the reason that there is a lot of pressure needed to install the pulley. If it goes on too easy, it will spin on the shaft at some point. The kits are not expensive and well worth the investment.When I bought my Lars pump, it came with a bolt, washer and nut. Press on. Having said that, I instead used a installer/removal tool from Orielley, but in effect did the same press on function.
Its on correct but it doesnt have the groove to remove. The only thing I can think that it can be remove short of destroying it, heat it up until it slides off. Then it may warp. Its cheap and its just for looks too. I bought one to use but opted to use my old pulley and I have no regrets.Ok, but isn't the pulley on backwards? I don't see the lip.
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