brake hose
Yes. In 1978, John Travolta starred as Danny in Grease alongside Olivia Newton-John, who played Sandy.
Yes - Didi conn appears as Frenchy (from Grease no 1) in the movie Grease Two.
Yes he did sing the songs in the movie Grease.
No
The cast of Grease - 2004 includes: Dog Fashion Disco
when installing them always pack the bearings with grease, if the bearing has been run without grease and making a roaring sound it is probably bad and needs replaced
There are no grease fittings on the wheel of any car. The wheel bearings must be removed, cleaned, inspected, repacked, and replaced.
That depends on which kind of wheel bearings. The 1994 Dakota 4X4's (and possibly a few 2wd's) came with a non-repackable, sealed hub assembly, in which case, no packing is possible. A problem with the wheel bearings in that case means replacing the entire hub assembly.For 2wd models using tapered spindles and wheel bearings, packing the bearings is the same as packing any other wheel bearings; A simple, if messy job that will be cleaner (maybe) if you wear gloves. First off, clean all traces of old grease from the bearings and races with solvent. Then inspect them for any signs of wear, heat discolouration, or other defects. If any defect is present, replace the bearing and its races; They come in matched sets, you cannot use old bearings with new races, or vice versa. That done, now its just a matter of using your hands and fingers to squeeze and pack (hence the term, 'packing') the bearings full of grease, making certain that the grease fills every nook and cranny of the bearings and their cage. That's all there is to it. Once that's done, install them properly and happy motoring.
As a Gm Tech. i can tell you that we pack your steering shaft full of a thick grease. Not your bearings. the steering shaft is meant to act like a shock, when the grease is not enough the shock can be felt in the wheel. Now Gm is having the dealerships replace the shafts if the vehicle is under warranty
If you are talking about the hub bearings , you can't grease them , they are a sealed unit .
Cant They are a sealed, non servicable unit. If they are making noise, they must be replaced, about $135 each
Yes! These pin bearings are surrounded by high temp grease, the grease is kept where it should be by rubber seals. Once these seals are worn out, and cracked, or broken completely, the grease finds its way away from the bearings, and then you have metal on metal contact. There are four parts to a bearing system on each wheel; the inner bearing, outter bearing, and racers for both. the bearings run along the racers, and without the proper amount, and quality grease, these pin bearings with soon break the racer/lose bearing from retainer/lock up/or just simply over heat and STOP the wheel from turning. so, replace those bearings, and get NEW high temp bearing grease and chock it FULL. this will prevent any future problems.
You must remove the wheel bearings, inspect them, repack them with grease, and install them back in the vehicle.
Chevy has a floating axle, the bearings share grease in common with the differential. By filling the diff you are greasing the wheel bearings. Onjig
The bearings run in the differential grease fed through the axle housing.
The procedure for replacing the bearings on a Chevy Venture is quite straightforward. Remove the inner drive seal protector first, then secure the rotor by placing a punch into the rotor vents and the brake caliper, and remove the hub nut and washer. After removing the brake caliper, a removal tool will be required to pull the hub free. Ample grease must be used on the hub, seals and the new bearings, and use 38 foot-pounds of torque to tighten the brake caliper, and 185 foot-pounds on the hub nut.
you use "C" clamp or a factory tool to force the caliper pistons back into the caliper piston bores witch forces the brake fluid back into the master cylinder. Now you can install the new pads and then reinstall the roter and bolt the caliper back onto the spindle.Be sure to use high temp bearing grease for the wheel bearings.