Andrew Shadow
Site Supporter

Spacers should be tight up against the inner face of the bearing, so that is okBoth bearing surfaces are glass smooth, if thats what you mean, however they turn slow and stiff, the outer one turns more stiff, this is the one against the backwards spacer.. but they do turn.
How freely or tightly should they turn? I wish I had a new one to compare.
The spacer is there and it’s not loose at all, but I didn’t go out of my way to loosen it.
Standard stuff is depending on how mechanically inclined you are and what tools are at your disposal. You can't judge a bearing alone by how free you think it should spin. Failed bearing can spin very freely. IMO your bearings by your description sound perfect.Totally agree, and what you said helps.. they do roll smoothly, but I feel they should be more free.. it takes quite abit twisting with 2 fingers to get it to move and your not going to get grip to turn it a full circle.
There’s a bike shop close by, been tempted to use them for other things but ended up doing myself or changed directions, I’ll take my wheel to them in the am and they should be able to check them out in seconds right?
Next question then is seeing how I am not counting on them to install my wheel, is this bearing replacement work pretty standard stuff that a good bike shop should have no issue or does this procedure have its own secrets you have to know?
As for replacement bearings.. I assume oem? If not is there a go to?
Thanks!!
Yes, a good mechanic should be able to suss out the condition of the bearings in seconds. And if you are elbow to elbow w/ him while he does it, you should be able to figure out just as quickly if he knows what he is doing. Ask what he is looking for and ask him to show you - teach you.Totally agree, and what you said helps.. they do roll smoothly, but I feel they should be more free.. it takes quite abit twisting with 2 fingers to get it to move and your not going to get grip to turn it a full circle.
There’s a bike shop close by, been tempted to use them for other things but ended up doing myself or changed directions, I’ll take my wheel to them in the am and they should be able to check them out in seconds right?
is this bearing replacement work pretty standard stuff that a good bike shop should have no issue
The secrets are going slowly and learning by doing. Yes, we all make mistakes and if you have to replace damaged parts it is part of learning. If you bang in the second bearing too tight and are side loading the inner races they might fail in a few thousand miles. Big deal, this is not an expensive or high labor job.does this procedure have its own secrets you have to know?
As for replacement bearings.. I assume oem? If not is there a go to?
Thanks!!