Sailfree
Well-Known Member
Got the original Jeanneau one out this weekend but had to finally saw a section out to enable its removal. Trying pressure just made the outer plastic housing deform locally.
The original Jeanneau bearing was in a hard white plastic outer housing bonded to what appeared to be a thin tube of possibly phospher bronze and finally a inner cylinder of a black hard rubber substance with longitudinal grooves (I assume to enable water to lubricate/cool the bearing) as the bearing surface against the shaft.
The bearing is for a 30mm shaft and 200mm long.
I was concerned over the difficulty of pressing in a new plastic bearing and understand that many replace these with a complete phospher bronze bearing.
Can someone advise how these are different please? do they still have longitudinal grooves?
The original Jeanneau bearing was in a hard white plastic outer housing bonded to what appeared to be a thin tube of possibly phospher bronze and finally a inner cylinder of a black hard rubber substance with longitudinal grooves (I assume to enable water to lubricate/cool the bearing) as the bearing surface against the shaft.
The bearing is for a 30mm shaft and 200mm long.
I was concerned over the difficulty of pressing in a new plastic bearing and understand that many replace these with a complete phospher bronze bearing.
Can someone advise how these are different please? do they still have longitudinal grooves?