I don't understand why you take the disc apart that way? I put a pipe wrench on the far end of the shaft and break the nut loose while everything is still mounted on the disc. Then I pull the entire shaft out in one piece and the discs and spacers drop off as I go. Then I remove the bearings from the keepers and replace them. Slide the shaft back in, mounting the discs and spacers in the correct order as I go. Tighten everything up and good to go. Run the disc in the dirt for 10 or 15 minutes then re-tighten everything again. I use a hammer wrench to remove and tighten the big nut on the end.
@@nateboyce1 Don't bother with air impacts. I ran snapons for years and they would break every 3 years or so and I only used them a handful of times per year. Milwaukee's big electric has far more torque than any air impact ive ever tried and last much longer
I don't understand why you take the disc apart that way? I put a pipe wrench on the far end of the shaft and break the nut loose while everything is still mounted on the disc. Then I pull the entire shaft out in one piece and the discs and spacers drop off as I go. Then I remove the bearings from the keepers and replace them. Slide the shaft back in, mounting the discs and spacers in the correct order as I go. Tighten everything up and good to go. Run the disc in the dirt for 10 or 15 minutes then re-tighten everything again.
I use a hammer wrench to remove and tighten the big nut on the end.
That would work for the outside but the inside won’t clear.
Need a impact for that farm work.
I would have if my compressor at the farm was large enough to run one.
@@nateboyce1 Don't bother with air impacts. I ran snapons for years and they would break every 3 years or so and I only used them a handful of times per year. Milwaukee's big electric has far more torque than any air impact ive ever tried and last much longer
Is that Milwaukee's cordless impact?