Continuing on...
I decided to pull the bearings from the top drum as well. I figure I may as well swap the even though they felt fine as I want to do this work once and be up and running for a long time. The bearings are in pillow blocks that are of a unique design to the brand sealmaster. AEM used sealmaster bearings extensively in their machines as I can now attest to having worked on two different AEM sanders. The distinguishing characteristic of the sealmaster bearings is they have a clamping collar that locks on the shaft that they attach to.
I ended buying a bunch of sealmaster bearings from eBay and today some arrived. Including the ones that I speculated would fit the pillow blocks for the upper drum. They were not quite the same but pretty close, and I determined they would work so I set about pulling the second pillow block and replacing the bearings.
I mentioned that the pillow blocks were unique, most pillow blocks I have seen have wings which bolt down, these are particularly narrow and have tapped holes in their base. They also have a ring on the locking collar on the bearing.
I used my bearing splitter/puller to remove the pillow block from the shaft and stuck the pillow block into my large bench vise. I then found an appropriately size piece of stock to fit the bearing.
The bearings fit into pillow blocks in a spherical system, this allows the bearing to adjust if the blocks are not quite aligned. It makes for an interesting removal. They get tilted to be removed.
Here it is at about 90º to the block
The back side has two notches which allow the bearing to come right out.
Here is the new bearing getting ready to go back in. The bearings I bought as replacements don;t have the locking collar- they simply use setscrews. This is not quite as desirable to me, but since it is the upper drum, I am accepting.
going back in
and seated.
Back on the shaft and mounted in the sander. Looking at it now, I wonder if I have it backwards!
Just a note on Sealmaster bearing nomenclature for the next person who is planning on ordering these.
-They are sized by the shaft that they fit in 16ths of an inch, so the er-16 bearings I bought are 1" ID. The OD's seem to only come in one size per ID.
-The fancy locking collar is indicated by a "t" in the bearing number, so an er-16 has the set screws and an er-16t has their fancy locking collar.
-The er's I have been mentioning are the bearings that fit the two lower shaft, The ones that fit the pillow blocks have other lead letters, but the 16 remains the same.