Subaru Rear Wheel Bearing - Press In

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  • čas přidán 24. 02. 2017
  • Come along with Eric O. as he works on a Subaru with a press in rear wheel bearing. This job usually requires a lot of spray, new control arm bushings, a torch, a sawzall, and a lot of bad words. In this video we are gonna use BIG NASTY and do what needs doing!
    Socket used in video: astore.amazon.com/httpswwwy083...
    Big Nasty: astore.amazon.com/httpswwwy083...
    Big Nasty Quick Chuck: astore.amazon.com/httpswwwy083...
    Interested in stuff seen in the videos or the tools and toys Eric O. likes and uses? Check out the S.M.A. "A-Store" and help support the channel! : astore.amazon.com/httpswwwy083...
    If an SMA Video has helped you out please consider giving using the "support" link on our CZcams home page. The videos take real time to create and pull us away from real work that pays our bills.
    THANKS!
    --Eric O.
    WANT AN "SMA" STICKER OF YOUR OWN!?!
    Simply send and E-mail to SMAstickers@outlook.com including: your shipping address and e-mail address in the text, I in turn will send you a paypal invoice for $5 each USA or $6 each international. Let me know how many you want and as soon as the paypal invoice is paid I will ship them out ASAP! Thanks for your support of our channel!!
    --Eric & Vanessa O.
    Feel like sending some swag to SMA because you love the videos but don't know where to send it?
    Just ship it here:
    South Main Auto Repair
    47 S. Main St
    PO Box 471
    Avoca, NY 14809
    Disclaimer:
    Due to factors beyond the control of South Main Auto Repair, it cannot guarantee against unauthorized modifications of this information, or improper use of this information. South Main Auto Repair assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. South Main Auto Repair recommends safe practices when working with power tools, automotive lifts, lifting tools, jack stands, electrical equipment, blunt instruments, chemicals, lubricants, or any other tools or equipment seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of South Main Auto Repair, no information contained in this video shall create any express or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not South Main Auto Repair.
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @robe5000
    @robe5000 Před 7 lety +397

    The first 10 minutes went by, my wife asked what the hell I was watching .... I told her a guy removing a bolt....
    Figure I better go find something to do...

    • @milfordcivic6755
      @milfordcivic6755 Před 7 lety +72

      LOL....if she can watch HGTV, you can watch this!

    • @haroldlm64
      @haroldlm64 Před 7 lety +5

      Robert Perry 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @pczapp827
      @pczapp827 Před 7 lety +23

      When you save a couple thousand working on her broken car ---
      she will be able to spend most of the savings somewhere, as
      all women do,then you keep watching You Tube Videos

    • @RealCadde
      @RealCadde Před 7 lety +9

      Well... It's not just removing a bolt. But i can imagine the face on her if you said that.

    • @RandallFlaggNY
      @RandallFlaggNY Před 7 lety +6

      @pc zapp Hmm...buy your own big nasty with the savings, or she spends it on shoes...

  • @paulbudford
    @paulbudford Před 3 lety +37

    Those people living in warmer climate don't know how lucky they are.
    Great job.

    • @julesmakes7
      @julesmakes7 Před 2 lety

      Yes we do !

    • @lucygray6162
      @lucygray6162 Před 2 lety

      Everybody wants to move down here to get away from the ice and rust, and don't think about the alligators, hurricanes and unbearable heat. And you should see what living near a FL beach can do to a car in a year. Salt air can blow for blocks all year round. First, the door panels start melting....

    • @paulbudford
      @paulbudford Před 2 lety

      @@lucygray6162 I get the cold, wet, and sea salt. I live a couple hundred yards from the sea in the UK. 😬

    • @NobodyUR
      @NobodyUR Před 2 lety

      @@lucygray6162 I'll keep my salt and cold to avoid the heat and no break from insects and vermin.
      At least I know what Im Getting here in Ohio by season.
      Spring, ants and chipmunks. Summer ground hornets and chipmunks lol. Fall wolf spiders come in to say high.... winter. Damn field mice move in some years one or two all year then like this past year. It was Mice-athon 5000 lol
      Cost of being in an older home 🤷🏼‍♂️
      Still better than heat 👉🥵

    • @erickieffer8440
      @erickieffer8440 Před 6 měsíci

      @@NobodyUR You are right, still better than the heat.

  • @chungaleta1234
    @chungaleta1234 Před 7 lety +87

    "If I can do it, you can do it" Yeah sure!!!! (Looking down at my harbour freight socket set) LOL
    Great vid Eric!!!

    • @tyree9055
      @tyree9055 Před 3 lety +1

      I don't think my 20 year old Craftsman set is up to that task either... I know my hands and arms aren't!
      🤣👍

    • @Loulito
      @Loulito Před 3 lety +1

      @@tyree9055 LMAOOOOOO xD

    • @dchawk81
      @dchawk81 Před 2 lety

      You've already got the sacrificial set. All you need is the good ones.

  • @markfree6832
    @markfree6832 Před 5 lety +71

    I have been an aircraft mechanic for 30+ years and I want to complement you on what a great job you do in narrating your videos. They are done for anyone at any level to understand and done with some personality ....Great Job....Mark

  • @sjn7220
    @sjn7220 Před 7 lety +196

    I can see the bill now:
    Parts and labor : $500
    Penetrating spray: $100
    New air compressor: $1500

    • @wolfwolfenstein5537
      @wolfwolfenstein5537 Před 3 lety +28

      Better idea... 1 gallon gas $2.97.. 1 match $0.02.. 1 insurance claim...priceless..

    • @RidgelineJames
      @RidgelineJames Před 3 lety +13

      @@wolfwolfenstein5537 I wish I got this advice when I bought my first and last Subaru

    • @xxRamD3yruxx
      @xxRamD3yruxx Před 3 lety +3

      @@wolfwolfenstein5537 damn, you use high test for a car fire?

    • @wolfwolfenstein5537
      @wolfwolfenstein5537 Před 3 lety +3

      @@xxRamD3yruxx was thinking of the prices here at the marina. But then.. nothing but the best for a Subaru

    • @robwinder4282
      @robwinder4282 Před rokem

      ROFLOL

  • @midnightrunner684
    @midnightrunner684 Před 7 lety +252

    I grew up in Northeast Ohio as a kid back in the 1970'/early 1980's before moving to Sunny Florida .My Dad was a Pennsylvania coal miner and was sick very badly with Black lung .He could barely breath .I remember watching my Dad out laying under those old rust bucket cars that we own in the middle of freezing winter out frozen to the bone wrenching on those cars and Bizziching the whole time. .I remember him cursing the engineers out from under the car and Always saying "God what did I do so Bad in life to deserve this crap ?? Ha ha ..We moved to Florida where he passed away 5 years later from the Black lung ..He spent his last 5 years in life wrenching on rust free cars ha ha ..Rest In Peace Dad ...

    • @fieldsofomagh
      @fieldsofomagh Před 7 lety +8

      billjones citrus county florida The man had to do what a man has to do ! R.I.P.

    • @JeffreyStrader
      @JeffreyStrader Před 7 lety +1

      billjones citrus county florida, the majority of that rust could have been avoided, by simply applying a vehicle undercoating........Why they prefer the damage is beyond me.

    • @johnzore
      @johnzore Před 5 lety +5

      working at lkq in crystal river. grow up on long island and worked on boats for 20 years. surely dont miss the rust,just the pizza lol

    • @clevelandmaker386
      @clevelandmaker386 Před 5 lety +5

      thank you and your dad for keeping this country going...thats why I love old American Cars!.....cause of men like your dad..its sad that people give their money to Honda!

    • @bunberrier
      @bunberrier Před 5 lety +2

      FLorida here too.... so glad I don't live where cars literally dissolve. All my vehicles are 20 years old or older and they work fine, and have very little rust under them.

  • @boba9170
    @boba9170 Před 5 lety +59

    You have a great demeanor and conversationalist style of teaching. I enjoy watching your videos and learn a lot.

  • @TheDrewCharles
    @TheDrewCharles Před 2 lety +10

    Eric, Drew Charles here. I'm just glad to watch this again for the 10th time. I always get a kick out of your work. I am always on pins and needles waiting for you to break out the pickle fork. you do a great job and your narrative is superb. anybody on any level of technical experience could greatly enjoy your work. Thank you.
    I know this video is over two years old and I still love it over and over thank you again. I don't even know if you still read comments on two-year-old videos, but thank you anyway. Drew-Charles

    • @kennethseden
      @kennethseden Před rokem

      I wonder if putting some antiseize lube on that bolt would help. But yeah changing design of bolt probably best

  • @1903ronnie
    @1903ronnie Před 7 lety +91

    When Big Nasty comes out, you know things are getting serious!

  • @ferventlyfree5511
    @ferventlyfree5511 Před 5 lety +17

    I've never seen a video so frustrating, yet so satisfying....

  • @panzerabwerkanone
    @panzerabwerkanone Před 5 lety +262

    Welcome to the South Main Auto Church of Latter Day Auto Mechanics. I am Pastor Eric O. Let us Spray.

    • @railnut8453
      @railnut8453 Před 4 lety +5

      Better known as panther piss!!!

    • @funnydubby6401
      @funnydubby6401 Před 3 lety +4

      A reading from the book of BFH, wailing just a bit too hard

    • @abcdefgh9138
      @abcdefgh9138 Před 3 lety +3

      Most underrated comment ever.

    • @BrennanHoyt
      @BrennanHoyt Před 3 lety +2

      Spectacular comment and as Tyler said, "Underrated". I remember the hill side events in Elmira when I was a child.

    • @SumitSharma-ug9wl
      @SumitSharma-ug9wl Před 2 lety +1

      Amen 🙏

  • @TheActualCaveman
    @TheActualCaveman Před 5 lety +23

    Man what a chore. I have to do this on my forester. Now im wondering if i should just pay to give somebody else the headache.

  • @baddriversofnorthtexas6850
    @baddriversofnorthtexas6850 Před 7 lety +92

    RIP South Main Auto 80 gallon air compressor

  • @anthm76
    @anthm76 Před 7 lety +74

    Down south, everything takes two and a half minutes to do, Scotty Kilmer style!

    • @danielbowes4627
      @danielbowes4627 Před 5 lety +3

      ya you dont have to use your brain as much

    • @TonicofSonic
      @TonicofSonic Před 3 lety +2

      Give it the old "uh"

    • @blackiechong4344
      @blackiechong4344 Před 3 lety +3

      Scotty is nothing but a Hack

    • @smore1g
      @smore1g Před 2 lety

      I'm in Colorado and its a privilege working on rust-free cars that are 20 years okd

  • @jerrys2346
    @jerrys2346 Před 3 lety +2

    Watched this on my phone 2 days ago while waiting to go in for my back surgery. It was calming to watch Eric battling some rust to take my mind off the matter.

  • @georgemolwitz7112
    @georgemolwitz7112 Před 4 lety +9

    Wow, now I know what my mechanic went through replacing my Outback's RR wheel bearing! Definitely glad I didn't attempt that repair. Living in the rust belt has its challenges.

  • @Miles7955
    @Miles7955 Před 5 lety +3

    Eric, I'll tell you what, It's amazing being able to work on a car without needing to be concerned about rust and corrosion as you appear to be, It's made me very grateful for my experiences with dismantling suspension components and having minimal issues with them, and your channel has opened my perspective up to the fact that it can be a whole lot harder than I've experienced in the past.
    Keep making them awesome CZcams videos, really enjoying watching them!!!

  • @andrewwilson8317
    @andrewwilson8317 Před 7 lety +53

    The bastard bolt as we call it! Bloody farmers here in Scotland love their Subaru and like driving in shit and salted roads. Pays to have a spare hub and arms to swap out the whole lot and overhaul the unit on the bench for next car. Just drop the lot,hub,arms etc and bolt on a spare unit. Makes for a faster turnaround and shitty one can be refurbed in time between jobs.

    • @wysetech2000
      @wysetech2000 Před 7 lety +9

      Andrew Wilson Well that's a different approach if you get a lot of Subaru's. I like it.

    • @fieldsofomagh
      @fieldsofomagh Před 7 lety +2

      Andrew Wilson That sounds like common sense !

    • @andrewwilson8317
      @andrewwilson8317 Před 7 lety +4

      wysetech2000 I don't know if it's the climate,the way they are driven,where they are driven or just the car is hard on consumables but they knock out bearings and brakes quite readily. I also replace a lot of bushes on them. It is the preferred option to drive one around here. As capable as a four by four but a faster and nicer drive.

    • @tuslogdet5276
      @tuslogdet5276 Před 7 lety

      Tom OConnor o

  • @charlesohern7389
    @charlesohern7389 Před 3 lety

    Best car repair videos. Eric has a sense of humor along with
    mechanical ability and knowledge. Born teacher.

  • @seanfox6947
    @seanfox6947 Před 5 lety +1

    Is it weird that this is my second time watching this! Just love watching the rust being mushed up with the oil etc!!!

  • @killerguitars52
    @killerguitars52 Před 7 lety +4

    I saw the thumbnail, and the length of this video in my homepage and thought.... this is going to be amazing. I was not disappointed.

  • @baxrok2.
    @baxrok2. Před 7 lety +5

    Packed with goodies. The "classic spin around," the never seize "tin man" effect, and then "prancing unicorns!" Great stuff Mr.O. Thanks!!

    • @SouthMainAuto
      @SouthMainAuto  Před 7 lety +4

      Haha you know dang well there must be unicorns down there prancing around

  • @theruley
    @theruley Před 5 lety +1

    I just did the rear bearings on my subaru. This video was a HUGE help for me. Thank you!

  • @Donny_Buysall
    @Donny_Buysall Před 7 lety

    Thank you for this! I am not a mechanic and have barely turned wrenches in my life. I live in Albany,NY and my 04 Forester XT needed a new brake backing plate.
    I went and dusted off my grandfather's Mac and Snap on stuff and pulled what looks like a .401 1980s Mac Impact hammer. Using this and my little Makita compressor and your techniques I was able to pop this horrible bolt out without roasting the bushings in about an hour or so! I referred to this video many times and cannot say thank you enough for taking your own personal free time to record and edit these videos! This really did help me tremendously and I learned alot. TYSM man!

  • @jeffgordon9103
    @jeffgordon9103 Před 3 lety +10

    This was the very first video I watched. 4 years later still watching. You Sir are a Prime example of the American people and Her spirit. May God bless you and your family

    • @bahnfire318is
      @bahnfire318is Před rokem

      yes this mans spirit was embiggened by invisible lines. BOOMER ALERT

  • @garageworker
    @garageworker Před 7 lety +81

    I have PTSD from watching this video. I've worked on too many stuck Subaru bolts.

    • @rinunculartoo3006
      @rinunculartoo3006 Před 5 lety +3

      It's a poor design really, I' m wondering if stainless steel bolts would have been a better option, would have made removal easier perhaps.

    • @SPAZTICCYTOPLASM
      @SPAZTICCYTOPLASM Před 5 lety +4

      ​@@rinunculartoo3006 It would really depend on the stainless, and steel mating. You can still get galvanic corrosion whic is what causes the materials to mate:
      www.bssa.org.uk/topics.php?article=89
      Copper antisieze is good stuff, and maybe fastners should be coated with copper since it doesn't rust to steel as readily.

    • @rickw4160
      @rickw4160 Před 3 lety

      its not so much the bolts, its the bushings. They kinda rust and glue themselves in place and the impact gun hits are just kinda absorbed by the rubber. They don't actually get a lot of movement though their arc of travel.

    • @cannaroe1213
      @cannaroe1213 Před 3 lety

      @@rickw4160 yeah seems like a specalised screw clamp would go a long way, on both bushings. Something like the three-fingered clamps they have in chemistry sets.
      Or you know, like, a million tiny hits from a numatic hammer whatev.

    • @rickw4160
      @rickw4160 Před 3 lety

      The other option is to torch em and burn it.

  • @nedsurf1876
    @nedsurf1876 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks for this video. It helped take the assembly apart for originally a CV boot replacement job. I have a 98 Forester with only 75k but the rubber parts are rotting out. One of the long bolts came out with the back and forth method using the impact wrench you demonstrated. The other was hopelessly frozen on the forward bushing. On that I cut the bolt head, used a small three arm puller to press it out of the trailing arm bushing, slid the knuckle off with a 5lb persuader, then used the three arm puller to press out the bushing and remaining bolt from the front control arm. It was one of the tougher car jobs I've done for sure. The other side that the bolt came free had the axle stuck to the hub. I pounded, pulled and heated that to oblivion so its getting new half axle, hub, seals and bearing just in case things got warped and/or melted. I don't want to pick this fight with it again so I plan on taking that bolt out at the beginning of every winter when I put my snow tires on and slopping some anti seize on it. Its easy enough to get to with the impact.

  • @terryrust4973
    @terryrust4973 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks so much for your great videos, you can't imagine how much time and effort you save all of us that are doing this at home. I'm in my 70's, and have always done all of the work on my own vehicles - most everyone I know hates to work on vehicles, but I've always looked at it as occupational therapy - nothing makes me feel as good as when I fix the problem and take the vehicle out for a "test drive". And I always take the opportunity to buy new tools to make my life easier! I live in southwestern Colorado, and have never really appreciated the LACK of rust we have here - now, every time I manage to loosen a stuck bolt, I'll be seeing the Unicorns dancing around! Thanks again for putting a smile on my face!

  • @dalevandermeer719
    @dalevandermeer719 Před 7 lety +3

    I got to say it's nice to watch somebody else work for once nice job we have the same rust in Michigan fun fun

  • @icurt06
    @icurt06 Před 7 lety +4

    Awesome video! I learned a lot of tips and tricks from the Master. Don't let the head swell too much : ) Hope you enjoyed your lunch. No updates needed about the aftermath. Lol

  • @carlosvicens2642
    @carlosvicens2642 Před 4 lety

    Thank you Eric! My son has the same Subaru Impreza Outback Wagon (probably same year by the looks). And I have to replace the rear driver side wheel bearing. Exactly what you showed. Yours was a really good explanation, and entertaining. Now I have some hope. We just recently put a new clutch on the thing. After all the work that took, I can't let this car die! It has 188,000 miles. We live in PA, so rust is a big problem. I told my son to start saving for another car. That you again, I subscribed to your channel!

  • @kristianhermann5971
    @kristianhermann5971 Před 7 lety

    Lots o' rust up here in Canada too Eric! Appreciate the tips. Simply understanding the problem and options for removal is half the battle. The siezed CV axles on my 07' Kia were easily the toughest job I've ever done. And that was just to get to the clutch job. Your the best 'Rust Tamer' I know on CZcams 👍

  • @andrewsensel1487
    @andrewsensel1487 Před 5 lety +4

    When I lifted my SUS and had to tear the entire rear suspension apart, made sure to just go ahead and order all new mounting hardware and bushings because knew I was going to have to shred everything.

  • @wyattoneable
    @wyattoneable Před 7 lety +14

    I see your struggle brother. That was a great visual when the rust started breaking apart. I lived in Southern California when I was a mechanic and I didn't know how good I had it. Now that I'm in TN, I'm back in the semi-rust belt. Not as bad as you boys but not as nice as California either. Great video!

  • @joeysmama8701
    @joeysmama8701 Před 7 lety +1

    I never thought removing a rusty bolt can be so interesting to watch. I love these type videos and only you provide them. Keep the videos coming. I can't wait to see what you do with the Honda Civic..

  • @jorgefernandez-mv8hu
    @jorgefernandez-mv8hu Před 3 lety

    No wonder you are a calm individual. You get all your frustrations out on Subarus. Thanks for the tips.

  • @satamanschmidt3428
    @satamanschmidt3428 Před 7 lety +17

    Eric, you wonder what it would be like to live in a place without rust. Well, I have a good friend named Max who lives here in Phoenix now and is a Master Technician for Lexus. His home was Montreal, Canada. When I talk with Max about the difference between Phoenix and Montreal he has a simple analogy. Heaven vs. Hell. I asked him if he was ever moving back home and he nearly hit me with the sander we were using to prep his car for paint. I took his response to my question as a solid NO!

  • @strahlenmesstechnik1567
    @strahlenmesstechnik1567 Před 5 lety +4

    Hy dude! Really nice video! You helped me a lot....with your video, I decided doing this job on my 2007 Subaru Forester 2.5 XT myself:-). Thanks a lot from Switzerland, Markus. PS: I like your comments:-)

  • @oliver_klozoff
    @oliver_klozoff Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks for all the years of these videos Eric. Have one of these to do next week and was looking for someone who has already done it. Pleasantly surprised to find your videos up top when I went looking.

  • @robertdavis6708
    @robertdavis6708 Před 6 lety

    Even after a year, I like to come back to this video just to see Eric O. busting ass on scrap metal. Man Eric , you know the" In's and Out's" with a rust battle. Please continue on ........

  • @cfh4201969
    @cfh4201969 Před 5 lety +7

    Hey thanks for this vid. I have this car, 2007 WRX and bearing is getting noisy. I'm up here in NH. I've been a Ford truck mechanic for past 25 yrs. And I 'll have to tackle this in my driveway :(( We'll see how it goes. TY again for this informative video!!!!

  • @djrumple9761
    @djrumple9761 Před 7 lety +25

    being a technician here in Florida we see a lot rust because it seems like 80% of New Yorkers when they retire move to Florida and bring their Rusty Vehicles here so most the time it's not too bad but we still get the New York rust lol

    • @blubase06
      @blubase06 Před 4 lety

      You guys are a peninsula. Those by the ocean are susceptible to rust just by letting the car sit and getting rained on. Granted the cars I've seen from Florida have mild surface rust but still. It's nothing like Nevada

  • @llTheGuyll
    @llTheGuyll Před 5 lety

    Thank you Sir! Just wrapped up the job on my daughter's 2002 Forester. I had your video queued up on the laptop, other than the inner inner and inner outer seals it went smooth.

  • @antonisautos8704
    @antonisautos8704 Před 3 lety

    Videos like these make me glad I work on stuff down south... and yes it makes the job go by so much easier.

  • @Fireship1
    @Fireship1 Před 7 lety +7

    RRRRRRUUSSSTTT! I hate rust. Used to be a mechanic years ago. Now I only do jobs like this for my own personal amusement. And yes, I know what hardcore rust is I live in New Jersey! You kicked ass and took names. Great job Eric!

    • @SouthMainAuto
      @SouthMainAuto  Před 7 lety

      Oh man, nothing beats NY and NY Rust!

    • @SouthMainAuto
      @SouthMainAuto  Před 7 lety

      i mean NJ haha

    • @Eric_the_Hiking
      @Eric_the_Hiking Před 7 lety

      South Main Auto Repair Except QC rust

    • @RobertHancock1
      @RobertHancock1 Před 7 lety

      The amount of salt that gets dumped on the roads in the NE US just defies belief. Here in Western Canada there's not nearly as much, partly because it gets cold enough that salt doesn't work anymore, and partly because people don't expect that their roads will be snow-free all winter.

  • @midnightrunner684
    @midnightrunner684 Před 7 lety +90

    I remember Ohio had the inspections that your car had to pass to be able to get your license plates .Our cars were rotted out shells of what used to be cars ha ha .My Dad had to rig those cars every year to get them to pass ..We were poor and didn't have a Pot to piss in so buying a good car was out of the question for us ..I remember one time the car went in for inspection and they found a leaky brake line and failed the car .My Dad was like Shizzit what am I going to do ? I can't afford to buy steel brake line to redo this car .He went to the hardware and bought like 20 ft of copper line and took his flaring tool and a hacksaw and made new brake line out of that .he painted the copper line black with spray paint and climbed under the car and put it in then drove back to the inspection place and passed ...My Dad said if the inspector knew that the brake lines were copper line they would have failed this car on the spot ha ha but it worked and we drove that car many years ...We had a 1972 Pontiac Bonneville that was rotted out badly ..We got pulled over and the Ohio state trooper did a roadside inspection and failed dad's car because the emergency brake didn't work .The trooper told dad to get that fixed and get it signed off that it was fixed and pay the fine ...My Dad climbed under the car and the cable was broken and the brackets where the cable ran were rusted out .My dad was like how the hell an I supposed to fix this ??? He said I've got to do something to pass .This is the only car we got ...He got his welder out and took a steel bar and climed up under the dash and welded the bar onto the emergency brake peddle arm up under the dash where it couldn't be seen .The bar ran acrossed over to the regular brake peddle and when you pushed the E- Brake peddle down that bar pressed the brake peddle down and held the car in place .Dad took a toggle switch and cut the brake light switch wire and made it where when he was told to hit the E-Brake the brake lights wouldn't come on and cause him to fail ...We went into the inspection and the trooper told dad to hit his regular brake and put the car in gear and give it a little gas to make sure the brakes worked and the trooper stood behind the car ..then the trooper told dad to apply the emergency brake and do the same test .Well dad hit the switch so that the brake lights wouldn't come on then he pressed the E-Brake peddle down which also pushed the regular brake peddle down and the car passed ha ha .My dad went in paid the fine and we were on our way down the road ....I remember my dad saying on the drive home " I pray for the day that I don't have to drive this junk and can get a good car that I don't have to rig .ha ha ..Old memories I'll never forget from my childhood

    • @robertleifeld225
      @robertleifeld225 Před 7 lety +18

      Thanks, I love to hear others tell of the "good old times", occasionally I get to tell a story and today's "kids" have absolutely no idea what it was like in the 50's, and 60's. My dad had a "gas" station so "fxin' " stuff was a daily thing for our customers. A guy that worked for my dad would test spark plugs by holding the plug wire and he would jump a bit every time that plug would fire; he could tell a bad plug/wire by how hard he jumped. No snappy scanner for him; fuel trims? naw, just smell the exhaust pipe.
      Thanks for the memories, yours and my dad's
      Bob L

    • @MichaelMosesHammer
      @MichaelMosesHammer Před 6 lety +3

      Man that's some wonderful memories. I relate to rigging chit to get by inspections. I live in western pa, and rusted up junk was all i owned years back. I lay on the ground in the winters many times fixing chit. People not from around here have no idea what we go through. Right now my 02 subie has a bad ball joint driver side. 152000 original joint in it. It's nasty out right now, and i got to crawl, and fix it tomorrow. Be laying in the snow. It's softer than my gravel thats underneath. lol

    • @AngeredKabar
      @AngeredKabar Před 6 lety +1

      billjones citrus county florida I just had to get my car inspected in Missouri. What a joke. Failed me for an inner tie rod. When I climbed under my car to get the boot off I about impaled my temple on a bolt meant to hold the sub-frame on that was sticking out 2 inches. Brought it back and asked if they even looked at my car.

    • @whozaskin3639
      @whozaskin3639 Před 5 lety +1

      Copper is way pricier than brake line. Not stopping because of using copper is WAYYYYY more expensive. But hey, live another day right?

    • @davidhatzenbuhler6888
      @davidhatzenbuhler6888 Před 5 lety +6

      @@whozaskin3639 Some of us aren't as obiviously young as you. Forty-Five years ago copper wasn't as expensive as steel brake line. I replaced more than one copper brake line hack job on my multiple 70's VW Rabbits that I bought to drive and cars I repaired for friends when I was in School.

  • @bobm7275
    @bobm7275 Před 3 lety

    That's a long one and I spent the first half confused, finally I began to see the light. Great Job Your customers are lucky to have you.

  • @sanity1977
    @sanity1977 Před 7 lety +1

    "You ever get your tool stuck"? Priceless!! Great video sir... I enjoy your thoroughly detailed videos. A++++

  • @rknit6163
    @rknit6163 Před 7 lety +20

    Hey Eric. here's a thing to try next time. Assuming you have an arc welder. Put the ground clamp on the head of that rusty bolt. Set the amperage way low. Use any big fat electrode. Dead short on the nut end. Hold it until the bolt is red hot. Then start the beating. We love heat.

    • @TheSuraj03
      @TheSuraj03 Před 7 lety

      R Knit brilliant!!! I'm gonna follow your advice.

    • @chancegeorge5583
      @chancegeorge5583 Před 7 lety

      Good idea

    • @okkrom
      @okkrom Před 7 lety +6

      Clever, but you risk melting the rubber bushings, adding at least an 1 hour to the job and more $ in parts to the customer.

    • @rknit6163
      @rknit6163 Před 7 lety +4

      Elias Bargee That is true. You are likely to melt the rubber bushings. You can replace them in the car, and you are likely to destroy them anyway. You would have to compare the cost of the bushings to the time and frustration etc.

    • @heavylead1961
      @heavylead1961 Před 7 lety +4

      the bolt is heated up pretty good already... i like to shoot it with a CO2 extinguisher to shrink the bolt after heated, it usually pops right out after that

  • @kevinmccrea1335
    @kevinmccrea1335 Před 6 lety +5

    Great videos all the time from you I have a 99 Subaru Impreza Outback with drum brakes in the back and I need to change out a wheel bearing but I want to do it on the car like you did which press tool would you recommend for the easiest in and out of the bearing thank you

  • @DgitlRedBeard
    @DgitlRedBeard Před 6 lety

    Thanks for the vid. Just replaced passenger side rear wheel bearing on 05 Outback Sport. Here in TN the the lateral link bolt released without an issue. I had your vid playing while I went through the replacment. Thanks for the walk through. Keep up the good work.

  • @jonminer9891
    @jonminer9891 Před 3 lety

    Hi, Eric. Another old video in the book. And another good lesson on how to do work on rusty crusty hardware. Thanks for sharing! Stay Healthy!

  • @randalbloomquist7812
    @randalbloomquist7812 Před 6 lety +3

    I'm in Florida, there's no unicorns! I have experienced the same crap that you deal with growing up in the great white North. I was under my 11 year old F 150 the other day and it still has original part sticker's on most of the components and NO rust!

  • @spelunkerd
    @spelunkerd Před 7 lety +12

    People who don't like their bill should watch this video to see how much work and specialized tools are needed to do accomplish a job like this. Factor in how much more difficult it would be on a poorly lit garage floor with poor lighting and the wrong tools, and you get a feel for what life is like on the other side of the wrench. On the plus side, you've sold me on a Big Nasty, I've always wanted an air hammer that was worth using.

  • @intrepid5684
    @intrepid5684 Před 3 lety +1

    Good job. Never did I think that bolt would be that rusty. I've done many a wheel bearing, but not on a Subaru. That's a ball buster of a job.

  • @joshwinky6005
    @joshwinky6005 Před 7 lety

    Great video Mr. O!
    The look of Zen on your face when you were hammering on her was priceless.

  • @cw2lido
    @cw2lido Před 7 lety +11

    I can't stop laughing when you said "get me the same thing I get every time I go to McDonald's"!

  • @nicke2307
    @nicke2307 Před 7 lety +9

    amen to living in new york. i just did bearings in a 07 MB ml350 and had to drill out the abs sensors. broke each one. and each was $135

    • @cameltoeinspector6015
      @cameltoeinspector6015 Před 7 lety +2

      do i have to worry about this if i live in California

    • @thevoyager63
      @thevoyager63 Před 5 lety

      @@cameltoeinspector6015 No. Snow and salt = rust. No snow and salt in most of California, a tiny bit if you live in the mountains, nothing like NY and the Northeast experience.

    • @peeperGson
      @peeperGson Před 4 lety

      @@thevoyager63 i live in NY but i went to Tahoe many times and they get far more snow out there than anywhere on the east coast but it appears they are much more environmentally considerate and so they dont put down any salt on the roads... They just plow and spread dirt or sand over the roads and then i saw they go right back out and sweep it all up after it melts back down too...

  • @jeremygonzales9478
    @jeremygonzales9478 Před 7 lety

    Here from Good OLD Northern California. Not sure why i watch your rusty videos when I rarely ever come across your problems, but it sure is something good to watching.

  • @FaxMe2Barbados
    @FaxMe2Barbados Před 7 lety

    great video, really helped. I got her done today( 07 fozzie) , wasn't quite as rusty as that one but wasn't good. out here on cape cod. the rust monster never sleeps... thanks for posting this.

  • @aussiefirestorm
    @aussiefirestorm Před 5 lety +5

    Did one of these a week or three ago, driveshaft was stuck in the bearing/hub flange. Whole assembly sat in the press overnight in a bath of wd40 still stuck in the morning. By midday I had enough, took cover behind the press post and maxxed out pressure until something was about to break. Shaft cracked loose with an almighty bang and a shower of wd. This is Australia with no rust belt issues......

    • @SouthMainAuto
      @SouthMainAuto  Před 5 lety +1

      HAHAH SWEET!

    • @alexandercabral1396
      @alexandercabral1396 Před 5 lety

      Try a air hammer with a pointed bit in the center on the axle and it’ll push it out the hub

    • @SunnieSnell
      @SunnieSnell Před 5 lety

      Bloody aussies
      And yea rust is small except if ya live on a beach
      Use to pour sump oil all over my FC and then peeps would lean against it LOL

  • @aaronreihl2581
    @aaronreihl2581 Před 7 lety +82

    "if I was down in Florida I could do this with a crescent wrench"

    • @B1GDaddyFatStax
      @B1GDaddyFatStax Před 5 lety +5

      I live in ArridZona. You can only imagine how easy this stuff is here. Unless you live in Flagstaff. Then you may as well tell me you live in Denver.

    • @theejoeylee
      @theejoeylee Před 4 lety +2

      I live in N Wisconsin. My ranger is a 93. My life is a rusty hell

    • @williamskelton6751
      @williamskelton6751 Před 4 lety +1

      I am in FLA, the snow birds bring this with them

    • @robertl.fallin7062
      @robertl.fallin7062 Před 4 lety

      I knew a bruiser who could remove that with his thumb and middle finger! He could lift a top terminal battery by the terminal, same two finger. The only made one of'em

    • @skinlab4239
      @skinlab4239 Před 3 lety

      Adjustable wrench. Crescent makes wrenches as well now. It doesn't mean what it used to.

  • @delbertrohrbach4734
    @delbertrohrbach4734 Před 7 lety

    Eric, I can see you're truly a passionate mechanic. I think you are the best CZcams mechanic besides ETCG. Thanks for all your awesome videos and I have to say, I love the longer videos. You rock!

    • @larryhenson9680
      @larryhenson9680 Před 7 lety +3

      ETCG would not make a pimple on Eric O's Ass.

    • @delbertrohrbach4734
      @delbertrohrbach4734 Před 7 lety

      We all have our opinions to which I say I personally enjoy them both and appreciate their service.

  • @jovianlitany
    @jovianlitany Před 5 lety +2

    Aside from the primo skills, you manage to make this slog very entertaining.

  • @Badgertronix
    @Badgertronix Před 7 lety +5

    poetry in motion or a haiku made up of 4 letter words. Either way nice work

  • @dennisphillips5782
    @dennisphillips5782 Před 7 lety +9

    Great Job, I'm a retires ASE Master Mechanic. Would have been a pleasure to work with you..

  • @nitrosavy
    @nitrosavy Před 7 lety

    Great vid, takes me back to my mechanic days as a young man. Thanks for posting.

  • @franksgarageandcustoms8321

    Been a while since you made this video. My nissan x-trail was the same setup. Left rear failed the safety. 5 hours of scrapping with it. I won. No new bolt to be had in my small town.
    I saved the bolt, it wasnt as bad as this one.
    So since i replaced last one i have been soaking other side heavily whenever i get it into shop. One guy on big nasty, other one with impact spinning bolt.
    Fix junk and put it on the internet. Thats what you do!
    I just like to watch some one else deal with the same crap i also do on a daily basis.
    I have no problem with hard work, i can watch it all day!

  • @AdrianKingsleyHughes
    @AdrianKingsleyHughes Před 7 lety +17

    Imagining someone trying this in a driveway with a Harbor Freight socket set!

    • @SouthMainAuto
      @SouthMainAuto  Před 7 lety +24

      just bolt the tire back on and go get some beer....

    • @AdrianKingsleyHughes
      @AdrianKingsleyHughes Před 7 lety +3

      Then grab the oxy-acetylene and go to work!

    • @SmittySmithsonite
      @SmittySmithsonite Před 7 lety +2

      (Con't from SMA) ... then tie a rope around the wheel, use a big ratchet strap on the other side of the car to a BIG tree, and yank the wheel and hub out with your dually diesel. :D
      I've got mad enough in the past to contemplate trying that one, LOLOL!

    • @FaxMe2Barbados
      @FaxMe2Barbados Před 7 lety +1

      doing that this weekend, so whaddaya tryin to say? ... lol

    • @raymondwagoner4896
      @raymondwagoner4896 Před 5 lety +1

      i'm doing this saturday, what do you mean press in bearing the one i ordered is a bolt on, 2010 impreza.take 4 bolts out from rear and axle nut off.

  • @1Builtcummins
    @1Builtcummins Před 7 lety +3

    "you ever get your tool stuck"... Haha you crack me up man. Good healthy videos. Keep it up.

  • @reynoldscs
    @reynoldscs Před 4 lety

    One mechanic to another, I definitely feel your pain and frustrations.... makes us appreciate the "gravy" when it comes our way!

  • @SJAndrewbsme
    @SJAndrewbsme Před 5 lety +1

    Good god. Watching this makes me happy I live in Denver. No rust on anything. 20 year old steel is still pristine.

  • @SteveRobReviews
    @SteveRobReviews Před 7 lety +8

    Wow I'm exhausted Eric . And some think an automotive technician is looking at waveforms hahaha that was real right there. LOL

  • @moparbryan
    @moparbryan Před 7 lety +5

    Eric, I know nothing is gonna hold up against the red monster in your area forever, but have you ever tried the copper based never seize, the gold stuff? I switched years ago and it stays on and works a lot better in my experience. Someone told me or I read somewhere that the silver zinc based stuff was originally made for marine applications and works best with stainless steel, and the copper stuff was intended for "iron" or carbon steel

    • @mikeb7887
      @mikeb7887 Před 7 lety +1

      I work on boats as well that go in salt water. Have silver and copper anti-sieze for the cars. Copper really works well with high heat areas. Never use copper or silver in marine on aluminum blocks or lower units. The metals react in salt water and you get galvanic corosion. I have special marine anti-sieze that cantains no metals. It is moly based and seems to hold up the best. You can also use water proof marine grease called 2-4-C on some applications like prop shafts. Having a car in NY is about the same as driving it in salt water! Keep up the great videos Eric.

    • @satamanschmidt3428
      @satamanschmidt3428 Před 7 lety +1

      The other advantage of copper antiseize is that when it gets all over you it looks like you've got a healthy tan rather that as Eric said: "looking like the tin man."

  • @tomoakhill8825
    @tomoakhill8825 Před 4 lety

    I love watching "some guy removing a bolt." It is hard to explain just how entertaining Eric O. is. But really, this is the most fun, relaxing, enjoyable video I watch.

    • @alexanderSydneyOz
      @alexanderSydneyOz Před 4 lety

      It is certainly quite handy if you can foresee yourself as being that guy at some point! I would imagine most of us watching videos like this fall into that category.

  • @firefly3981
    @firefly3981 Před 3 lety

    My originally owned, daily driven through mountains of Michigan snow, 04 WRX wagon needed rear brakes in 2016. No prob, had done it before. This time I managed to ding the ABS tone wheel. Uh oh. The shop I took it to ended up cutting a wishbone to get it apart. I have been a professional race mechanic for 30 years and agreed that was the only way to move forward. The bolt had swelled from rust and was no longer a bolt. Rust is when I pay a shop to work on my car. Totally appreciate your effort and video. My 17 yr old WRX with 300hp has been the love of my car life, and to watch it rust away to a piece of junk is killing me

  • @robertperez2447
    @robertperez2447 Před 5 lety +4

    Sorry That you have to work with all that rust I live in Texas and work in San Antonio area where we really don’t see anything like that it must be absolutely horrible

  • @benjaminstockton3431
    @benjaminstockton3431 Před 7 lety +8

    eric o if you did that job in florida that 10 inch bolt would have fell out on its own he he

  • @joecoleman7666
    @joecoleman7666 Před 7 lety

    After my wife and I left your shop last fall, we took a drive through the finger lake area and then headed up through a national forest to Lake Champlain. Upstate NY has some beautiful scenery. We even talked about moving up for a couple of years so we could see more of NY and the New England area. (We're retired now). Then I watch a video like this and I only have to imagine myself lying on my back under my vehicles dealing with crust and I am brought back to my senses. We don't need salt down here in Texas, we just stay home for a day and wait for the the ice to melt. :)

  • @MrRodnick1955
    @MrRodnick1955 Před 6 lety

    Your one classy mechanic your right in Colorado we have 0 rust it's great things still get stuck locked and torches still get used. I enjoy your video channel I ain't lying

  • @mrexecutive1
    @mrexecutive1 Před 7 lety +4

    Would it be possible to just remove the Strut Bolts to knuckle, bypassing the lower bolt to take the axle out?

    • @BlackwaterDSM
      @BlackwaterDSM Před 3 lety

      No, because as you can tell, not even a heavy duty impact gun could twist the bolt. Not to mention, if it’s seized tight in the bushing and you try to use it as your pivot point to get the axle out, you’ll either destroy the bushing, or it will be so tight in there you wouldn’t even be able to pull the knuckle forward enough to get the axle out.

    • @bostonlover6080
      @bostonlover6080 Před 2 lety

      @@BlackwaterDSM I had the same question as mrexecutive1. I'm trying to get the lower bolt out but it's frozen in the bushing on the forward control arm. I don't want to destroy the bushing, but I'm noticing that with a breaker bar the rubber in the bushing flexes enough to allow the bolt to turn + or - about 45 degrees. If I haven't already damaged the rubber, this seems like enough to get the axle shaft out. The forester is a 2006 with only 35K miles and it's been garaged its entire life but it has been exposed to New England salt.
      Another thing I don't understand: How can an impact wrench free up the bolt? Wouldn't the rubber in the bushing cushion the impact?

  • @bluezr1
    @bluezr1 Před 5 lety +8

    Nothing like the smell of burning penetrating oil in the morning. :)

  • @SushiPac
    @SushiPac Před 7 lety

    Thank goodness I live in California!!! I had to take that exact bolt out because I was replacing the bushings and that bolt came out with ease. I gave it a huge glob of Antiseize when I installed it

  • @craigboone5527
    @craigboone5527 Před 6 lety +1

    Always getting it done right. Another good video Mr. O, thanks for sharing

  • @TrueBlueEG8
    @TrueBlueEG8 Před 6 lety +38

    People do not appreciate mechanics enough, and how hard we work to do a so called "simple job".

    • @charlesmitchell5650
      @charlesmitchell5650 Před 5 lety

      Salty mechanic work is like plumbing. Man 1 "That looks like a 10 minute job." Man 2 "So when will it be done?" Man 1 "Maybe in 10 minutes. Probably before 10 hours. But really I don't know..."

    • @appelk1172
      @appelk1172 Před 5 lety +3

      LOL. You make your bread and butter off of labor, and want people to appreciate how hard you have it? You must be special. Yeah, I work on vehicles too, live in MN where things rust, but don't cry about it.

    • @raymondwagoner4896
      @raymondwagoner4896 Před 5 lety

      Even worse out in the country where you don't have air compressors and hydraulic lifts.

    • @raymonddey7403
      @raymonddey7403 Před 5 lety

      Yeah then you have nearly all mechs (some good ones) that will charge you for stuff you don't need to do just to make more money. I've done all the work on my car myself.... Just redid my front brakes that a shop tried to quote me 500 bucks for parts and labor... Got my rotor pads and calipers for 60 bucks and took me less than an hour....

    • @pudermcgavin4462
      @pudermcgavin4462 Před 4 lety +1

      We are not mechanics we are technicians, why cuz electritan, Plummer, HVAC, dump customer interpretors thru idiot writers so underpaid lol

  • @melvinjohnson7033
    @melvinjohnson7033 Před 7 lety +3

    I like the smoking bolt at 26:55.

  • @Ehwal
    @Ehwal Před 4 lety +1

    We get a lot of rusty Subaru’s in Whistler, BC. I find torching the long bolt in half in the middle of the knuckle and air hammering each 1/2 out from the middle.
    We stock the bolts and bushes for this reason.
    If you don’t have a bolt, mark the inbound control arm alignment bolts and disconnect the arms inbound.
    We also use the hydraulic OTC hub grappler which is sweet.

  • @TheArcticWonder
    @TheArcticWonder Před 4 lety

    Very thankful for you and people like you who share knowledge freely.

  • @samuelbane6743
    @samuelbane6743 Před 7 lety +4

    No Sir!!! I am a shop owner in the Northeast region and I've seen my fair share of some nasty crap! However, that would ABSOLUTELY ruin my day!!!!!

  • @aussiebloke609
    @aussiebloke609 Před 7 lety +18

    We like carnage and rust - mostly because we're watching it, rather than actually doing it. :-P

  • @jstutz101
    @jstutz101 Před 7 lety

    My wife nick named you "Ratchet Man" a long time ago when I first started watching your videos. This one takes the air ratchet racket to whole new level..Awesome!

  • @bradcoomes9152
    @bradcoomes9152 Před 3 lety

    I live in MN where we love our road salt and you gave me the necessary info to get the job done on my '08 Forester.

  • @ejmagras
    @ejmagras Před 6 lety +3

    thanks for the video. enjoyed you suffering and pain. LOL

  • @hjen
    @hjen Před 5 lety +17

    Watched 30 minutes of bolt extractions. I don't even own a Subaru. WTF?

  • @pbysome
    @pbysome Před 4 lety

    Well done that man, patience and force a formidable combination.

  • @faceup5
    @faceup5 Před 5 lety

    2003 Subaru Forester. The right rear wheel bearing needs replaced every 60k miles like clockwork since new. This is a common known (design?) issue. I also remember my mechanic mentioning (cursing) that same long bolt, lol. Another great video. Thanks!

  • @overboostn
    @overboostn Před 7 lety +3

    Almost every video you post, I realize how lucky I am to work in the south. Until one of those northern rust buckets makes its way down here.

    • @fubartotale3389
      @fubartotale3389 Před 3 lety +1

      Believe me, its worth it to not have to live in the south.

  • @catap977
    @catap977 Před 6 lety +4

    I have one to do tomorrow wish me luck

    • @catap977
      @catap977 Před 6 lety +1

      some one has had it apart before because I had it all apart in about 15 minutes, here in Pa we are as bad as you with the salt. use a pickle fork between the bolt head and the washer

  • @edwardmilewski4361
    @edwardmilewski4361 Před 3 lety

    Always satisfying to listen and watch your videos...you have great teaching skills..

  • @nijloveanugelu
    @nijloveanugelu Před 5 lety

    Best mechaical video! I have watch this video when you post it,about 2 years ago...But when i have a bad day at work i return to this video because This is a really bad day.And you win!