Well, just my .002 worth on these drums. We used to loosen the nut a few turns, then drive the car (pretend you're running an "autocross"). This would often loosen them up. Another point is to spend as much time hammering on the *end* of the puller as you do on the spinner. Carefully applied heat helps too. Be sure to use anti-seize compound on the taper before you re-install, and next time it won't be such a problem. Best Regards, DaveG. PS - I forgot about this very important step, but be *sure* to heed the advice about leaving the nut on at the end of the axle shaft - stubborn as most of these are, axle damage (destruction?) is almost assured if you do not. ----- Original Message ----- From: pphillips <pphillips@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2001 3:57 PM Subject: [FWDLK] pulling rear brake hubs > I can really identify with the impossible-to-pull rear brake drums on > our cars. I totally destroyed one on my '63 New Yorker by beating it > while the puller was attached and under extreme tension. It also > destroyed the threads on the center hub. Had the same problem on my '64 > Chrysler 300, too. So, be careful, and get the right tool--expensive, > but worth it. > > Pete Phillips > Ector, Texas > '55 C300 > '63 New Yorker > '65 Polara
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