Lon nan Gruagach
Well-Known Member
Hammers and bearings are not good bedfellows, not by a long chalk.
Indeed, hence the question. Where can I get a 24mm socket with external flats?
...Is the pulley not keyed to the shaft?
Faced with a very similar problem, I managed to find an offset 24mm ring spanner that fitted inside the pulley recess
On mine, a Balmar unit, the pulley is not keyed to the shaft. I now have poly-V belt so using one of those constrictor tools also works but, as a time served mechanical apprentice, using one still feels wrong![]()
can you explain why the suggestion to hold the pulley with an old belt or similar while tightening nut with an ordinary socket won't work. Is the pulley not keyed to the shaft?
That would be my question also at I suggested in post #6, having used that technique numerous times even without a keyed shaft throughout my time working as a Mechanical Engineer.
Not strictly true, although I see where you're going with it.
Even at finger tight, you are starting to apply friction to the assembly, the more you tighten it, the more friction, giving you the ability to tighten it further.
Same sort is used for Strut Towers on cars (top of McPherson suspension, accessible from engine room). Available from car tool shops.
![]()
![]()
Check rotation of pulley. If it rotates against the thread rotation the weight of the alternator under load should tighten it for you as you use it , provided you get a bit of friction to start with
While it is possible (and maybe probable, havent done the math on relative friction and taper ngle of thread vs taper), especially if you lubricate the thread (as you should anyway) to tighten a nut on a taper shaft without clamping the shaft itself.... (way to long a sentence!) The drawing submitted shows no taper..... or woodruff key for that matter, which beggars the question: what stops it spinning anyway...
You need what's called a pass thru socket set...