madprofessor
"Loose Cannon Creations"
Huge fan of setscrews here! Just love the squiggly lines they draw into the axle as they cut their way around it, looks a little like a surfer's scratch drawing of a nice wave set.It's not supposed to, but hey, it's a bearing that's supposed to rotate anyway.stripped the bearing setscrews taking the axle out
Sorry, that was "that other guy'", I try to keep his sarcastic arse down, but he gets a peek out now and then. Several folks here know the multiple positive factors of using double-split locking collars sistered up against various systems that get mounted on an axle, preferably on both sides of each. The actual real work is done by that piece of keystock in the keyway, so things can't rotate. Keeping it from migrating along the axle is the collars' job, and no setscrew should be counted on to keep the part in place. Not for twisting of course, and not even counted on for migrating. On a bearing like you described? Who cares if there's even a setscrew in there to keep the bearing from rotating on the shaft? It is a bearing after all, and it's going to rotate something or other. Just needs to not migrate.
Do you think a double-split locking collar that doesn't require sliding anything off of the end of the axle, slaps on in 5 minutes flat, would have kept those setscrews from stripping out on the R&R job?










