Yeah! If a German bearing were available, I'd have surely bought it. Oh well, it sounds like this one is A-OK!Alvin in AZ wrote:Argentina, Germany, what's the difference?
That's interesting Alvin; I haven't heard of these different types of loads before! It makes sense. And that sounds like a nice experiment you did with your 351W setup!Alvin in AZ wrote:Like Ranchero said, it's a light duty application for spinning but kinda
"rough side-hammering loads" according to a website I read about it.
The bearing quality isn't the problem, it's the side-hammering the pilot
takes. The 6303 is hell for strong on the hammering part! I put a
flimsy little 6003 in my 351w as a test, theoretically it's not supposed
to hold up to the side-hammering-like loads so good. We'll see huh?
I noticed that just today! I asked for a 6303, and the guy said, "A '303 huh..."Alvin in AZ wrote:pps- Don't know why some outfits want to leave the "6" off? :/
And so they are! Thanks for letting me know--I checked it out.DuckRyder wrote:Google (or Bing) "MRC Bearings".
It appears they are owned by SKF.
Okay, excellent!DuckRyder wrote:I usually look for Timken or SKF but an SKF by another name is fine by me.
Interesting!DuckRyder wrote:SKF is a OEM for many of the German Car Companies (possibly US ones too)
It's classic isn't it--it's hard for me to imagine why anybody would ever buy the Chinese-made bearings.DuckRyder wrote:Funny I was getting bearings for the front wheels on the F100 and they guy was like "You want US or Chinese?" Me "US", him "They are twice as much", me "They will last twice as long...", him "thats true"....
You can count on that! I'd sooner put in my nice oil-impregnated bushing than use a Chinese bearing!BobbyFord wrote:ANYTHING but a Chinese bearing.
My next steps include cleaning up the back of the block (the bellhousing mating surface) and using the Browell Bellhousing alignment tool to make sure it's still in perfect alignment!
Alvin, Robert, and BobbyFord, thanks for the excellent replies!
Robroy