How to remove a 'press fit' steel ball bearing?


I'm doing some work to my Russco turntable. I need to replace the ball bearing in platter shaft. This bearing is pressed into the end of the platter shaft and cannot be just 'popped' out. It has to be forced / pulled out. Being pressed into the shaft, there is no way to get a grip on it to pull it out. Someone suggested that I heat the end of the shaft which would cause it to expand so the hole in the shaft would get bigger and the ball bearing would drop out. I tried that to no avail. Someone else tried to explain a removal method but I think he never really understood how this bearing is set. So, I'm going to try to explain this so that it is more clear.

Imagine that you are holding in your hand a 6" long steel rod of about 1" diameter. You turn that rod so that you are looking directly at one of the ends (you are seeing a 1" diameter circle). In the center of this end a hole of about 3/8" has been drilled. Into this 3/8" hole a ball bearing has been pressed so that approximately 1/2 of that steel ball bearing protrudes from the end of the shaft. How do you remove it?
kwillisjr
You could try some compressed air. I've used it to remove thrust plates down at the bottom of a bearing well a few times. The air blows out any oil that holding the ball/plate in place and gets in behind the ball, loosening it and popping it out. Hey, its worth a shot!

Fran
In automotive applications it usually takes some serious heat from an oxycetelene torch to release frozen studs and pressed fittings-- certainly more than butane or map gas. If the spindle is all metal you might get away with it.

The noninverted VPI TNT spindle bearing is similarly designed, but the bearing just falls out.
I first tried heating the shaft to no avail. Heating the shaft seems to have hardened the oil that had seeped past the bearing over time making it much harder to remove. I finally got that one out using a tungsten carbide bit in a dremel tool. My recommendation is "Do Not Heat the Shaft". I had another Russco platter needing the same work as well as both thrust bearing holders. For those I used a rotozip tool with a thin metal cutting blade. I very carefully cut a slot in the bearing and used a large handled screw driver to twist the bearing until it popped out. It took maybe 15 minutes to do all three.