if the bearing is noisy or the pump is leaking replace the pump.It is a job to replace but if you wanat to get a manual on your car from DISCOUNTAUTOREPAIRMANUALS.COM
it is always worthy to try - I just paid for my FW 750$!!!! @ Saturn
Just get a new hub from a junkyard.
Inside the transmission, just above the transmission oil pan.
The motor is not worth fixing. Go to a junkyard and just get a new one
The question sounds as if you expect Saturn to have a surface like Earth, part of which has oceans. Let's get this clear: the giant planets - including Saturn have no surface. Instead, they are gas giants - the gas just gets denser and denser, the lower you go. Saturn will, of course, have some water vapor, water droplets and water ice in its atmosphere. Part of its rings consist of water ice as well.
If you have a good size arbor press (12 ton, relatively inexpensive) and the equivalents of the called for tools (also relatively inexpensive) you can press out the hub from the steering knuckle/bearing assembly, then press out the bearing from the knuckle, press the new bearing back into the knuckle and then the hub back into the knuckle/bearing assembly then reinstall into your vehicle... or you can take the steering knuckle assembly to a machine shop and have them do it. If you think it's something you may do more than once, buy the tools. Incidentally, after 1994 the hub and bearing replacement is a very easy operation; just take out the hub/bearing assembly and install a new one. I just did it on my 1996 Taurus, basically the same car. The 1994 is a major pain by comparison. If the bearing starts to fail after a short period of time, then you need a new knuckle; you drove the car on a bad bearing for too long.
Yes, water ice has been detected in the atmosphere of Saturn.
Since Saturn has a mean density of 0.687 g/cm3, less than that of water, it is nice to think that it would float in water. While that is (sort of) true, you also have to consider that Saturn is much colder than the freezing point of water, so it would freeze whatever water it was placed in. Also, Saturn's core is much denser than water, so one would also have to consider what happens when the atmosphere of Saturn is boiled away by the temperature of the water. In the final analysis, it is moot, because the volume of water required to attempt to float Saturn would exceed the volume of Jupiter, and we just don't have that much water available.
The Pacific Ocean and the Bearing Strait (just western Alaska)
Saturn has an "average density" of just 0.687 grams per cubic centimeter, which is less than water. The interior of the planet does not have as large or dense a rock core as the other gas giants, compared to its overall diameter. Like Jupiter, it generates a very high internal heat.
A rod bearing is any easy fix just takes a little time. The part is only $7 for a new rod bearing . I wold say fix it yourself or find someone to help you who is handy with mechanical stuff!!! good luck I just changed mine. BEWARE OF THE KNOCK!!!
I adjusted one just before installing the drum, I had the same question, but they worked great afterward.. dave