After messing with the sub-transmission the other day, I decided to figure out why my rear axle had play, and why my brakes didn't work. So, I began working on disassembling the rear end!
I'm sure you all know the drill with disassembling these, but this was exploratory surgery for me. The jam nuts for the drum were a major pain, requiring the biggest wrench I could find, two cheater pipes, and a friend. Based on the condition of this machine I suspect the rear end has never been apart.
Under the brake drum I found the reason the brakes didn't work: corroded shoes and a failed lining. I was hoping to reuse these shoes but I'm not so cheap as to try gluing them back together... new shoes are on the way.
With the brake assembly off I was confronted with some bent and battered backing plates. The chain backing plate came off easily, but the drum backing plate has been welded onto the skid plate, which is all welded into the rear grab bar through someone's homemade tow hitch installation. It's ugly but I'm not ready to undo all of that, so I carefully took it all off in one piece.
Finally, it is on to the axle bearing retainer. The housing is luckily in good shape, but the bearings and seals in it were completely shot. It looks like someone submerged the axle in water with how much rust and mud is in there. No wonder my rear axle had play!
Nothing to do but renovate. A seal puller took care of the seals and a punch popped the old bearings out without much fuss. My new bearings are sealed, but I have enough experience with cheap Chinese bearings that I thought it wise to pull the seals off and repack them with some quality high-temp grease.
With that, reassembly was pretty easy. Punch the new bearings and seals into place, and reassemble. The axle had a little bit of rust in the area the seal would ride on, and even though I have sealed bearings I cleaned up the worst of the rust to give my new seals a fighting chance. It's not perfect but it's a phenomenal improvement over what it was.
Finally, I took a few minutes to straighten my backing plates and skid plate before reassembly. They aren't perfect, but with some careful ing they're a lot better.
That leaves me here. Not a lot more to do until some more of my parts come in. Waiting on a flywheel puller, fork bearings, and brake shoes to make more progress.